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In a surprising turn of events, Blizzard has announced

4 Years Ago



Ray Traced Shadows within World of Warcraft Shadowlands have now been allowed on the match's Beta/PTR, and the Wow gold classic first comparison shots have surfaced on the internet.

Back in April of this year, Blizzard added Ray Traced Shadow alternatives to the game's Alpha. Unfortunately, actual Ray Traced Shadows were not allowed just yet and those in the Alpha were only able to observe the new choices. According to the option's description, it"improves shadow quality together with ray tracing, which generates shadows with more natural softness, substantially increased precision, and from additional light sources."

Players from the alpha Could select one of the following Ray Traced Shadows choices:

Fast forward four weeks and we can now finally see the way the new shadows seem in the upcoming Shadowlands expansion. Before this week we reported the new NVIDIA Game Ready Driver added support for the brand new feature in Shadowlands, and several Beta/PTR players have shared some screenshots comparing Shadowlands with and without the Ray Traced Shadows enabled.

As shared by Blizzard, the new alternative within Shadowlands uses DirectX Ray Tracing 1.1 (DXR 1.1) along with a DXR 1.1-capable driver is required to utilize Ray Traced Shadows.We've included the shared comparison screenshots down under. As can be observed in these shots, and as may have been expected, the ramifications of Ray Traced Shadows aren't that clear but do seem to be stronger in darker regions with low light.

Blizzard has updated their minimum necessary spec to add 100GB storage space for the two SSDs and hard drives. Howeverthey warn players who performance of your hard disk may influence Shadowland's gaming experience.

In a surprising turn of events, Blizzard has announced that World of Warcraft Shadowlands currently requires a 100GB SSD for a minimum requirement, but does that mean you can not run the game using a normal spinning hard disk? A couple of Shadowlands beta testers have reported that running the game in an HDD has not affected their gameplay or performance in any substantial way.

However, it is probably a good idea to run this game in an SSD anyway (here's our list of Greatest SSDs). If you look at games such as Call of Duty Modern Warfare which do not require an SSD but cheap wow gold possess very large storage requirements, the game is playable but you will encounter painfully long loading times. It is also possible to potentially encounter"hitching" in which the HDD isn't fast enough to stream assets in real time.