Every PC gamer who has played with a custom-weighted, custom-weighted mouse having 20,000 DPI is aware that communication is vital in multiplayer games. AMD wants to make it easier for you to listen to your game audio when you are using a microphone in game. The brand new AMD Noise Suppression feature will use your graphics card to intelligently screen background noises from your environment, like an air conditioner or the sound from your own speakers. If you make use of this new power to say things like "gee gee GTFO newb," well, that's on you. The new system is a competitor to Nvidia's RTX Voice feature, now part of the Nvidia Broadcast suite. It does more or less exactly the same thing. gui mods The AMD Noise Suppression feature doesn't just apply to gaming-related communications regardless of its connection to gaming and the use of an Ryzen 5500+ CPU or Radeon RX 6600+ GPU. Once it's configured within the driver, it will work with any application that relies on voice input, including Zoom, Microsoft Teams, Discord and that other one that nobody is able to recall. In the Adrenalin 22.7.1 driver update are some notable OpenGL improvements that AMD claims will improve performance in games such as Minecraft by as much as 90 percent for some RX 6000 cards. Radeon Super Resolution (the older standard, not the more impressive FSR 2) now works on notebooks equipped with discrete RX cards, 5000 and 6000, in hybrid graphic setups and also works in fullscreen mode that is borderless. The most recent Adrenalin driver package is available here for download.