Nvidia invested closely in real-time ray tracing capabilities in its GeForce RTX 20-series graphics playing cards—a lot in order that these highest-end GeForce GPUs swapped out the age-old “GTX” branding for the brand new “RTX” title. But trade help for the unconventional new know-how hasn’t been quick in coming. Only a handful of big-name video games ship with RTX options enabled. At the annual Game Developers Conference on Monday, the corporate revealed plans designed to spur wider adoption. Beyond some dev-centric bulletins, Nvidia is enabling primary ray tracing help for a number of non-RTX GeForce GPUs.
Yes, you learn that accurately. RTX is coming to GTX. Kind of.

The GeForce GTX (and RTX) graphics playing cards that can help real-time ray tracing.