News

3D Vision will go gently into the dark night with the next GeForce driver release.
In a support document posted this month, NVIDIA has stated that they will no longer support 3D Vision in GeForce Game Ready drivers after the upcoming April 2019 Release 418 driver.
There are profiles within the drivers for each game, similar to SLI profiles. The GeForce 3D Vision profiles, however, store information on compatible games and recommended settings.
Despite offering a simple instalation and easy-to-use software, NVIDIA’s GeForce 3D Vision is only compatible with computers equipped with GeForce 8, 9 or GTX 200-series graphics cards.
Well, you can finally take off those 3D glasses you bought nearly a decade ago—Nvidia is ending support for 3D Vision next month.
NVIDIA 3D Vision – previously launched as GeForce 3D Vision – was launched in 2008, as a way for gamers to use any Direct3D game with a set of 3D glasses.
The new driver features a multidisplay setup, built-in 3D Vision drivers, and a revamped install experience that can clean out older versions of drivers to wipe the software slate clean.
When we switched to the GeForce 9600, the ghosting effect diminished significantly, but was still noticeable in Nvidia drivers' diagnostic test and Unreal Tournament 3.
Taiwanese manufacturer Sparkle has announced that its GeForce GT 240 graphics cards - including the OC and Calibre editions - are to be bundled with a free 3D Vision pack for a limited time.
Nvidia introduces GeForce 3D Vision, stereoscopic 3D glasses you might actually use.
We can't show you exactly what NVIDIA's GeForce 3D Vision stereoscopic glasses do to a game, because you obviously must be wearing the glasses the experience the 3D effect. But we did shoot some ...