With the release of the newest 461.72 WHQL GeForce game ready driver, Nvidia recently enabled initial Resizable BAR support for the desktop GeForce RTX 3060 GPU on select PC games, with more cards getting support in near future. Initially, “Resizable BAR” feature is going to be compatible with the company’s GeForce RTX 3060 desktop graphics cards and the RTX 30-series laptops.
Resizable BAR is a tech via which assets can be requested as-needed and accessed. As such, the CPU will efficiently access the entire frame buffer. Moreover, transfers can occur concurrently, rather than queuing, whenever there are multiple requests.
AMD has already showcased this tech in action, showing an 8-15% performance boost in some games. This is free performance boost, without any image degradation/loss.
Wccftech’s Keith May has done some preliminary testing of this new tech feature on several PC games in which NVIDIA has enabled support. Unlike AMD, NVIDIA has actually extended support for this Resizable BAR tech on even PCIe gen 3.0 platforms. Which means Intel’s 10th gen core CPU lineup, and the respective 400-series chipset motherboards now also offer support for this feature.
As of February 25th, 2021, Nvidia has enabled Resizable BAR support on the following PC titles, with more games to be added later on as the team does the internal testing:
- Assassin’s Creed Valhalla
- Battlefield V
- Borderlands 3
- Forza Horizon 4
- Gears 5
- Metro Exodus
- Red Dead Redemption 2
- Watch Dogs: Legion
Obviously, the testing was done on the above supported PC games. Below you can find some benchmarks showcasing the performance uplift this feature might bring to the table.
These are the full PC specs of the test system used by Wccftech.
So without further ado, here are the respective 1440p Resizable BAR benchmark results tested on the RTX 3060 12GB GPU. Assassin’s Creed Valhalla appears to be seemingly missing from this list. Overall, we are looking at a 4-11% increase in performance as evident from these benchmark scores.
Battlefield V:
Borderlands 3:
Forza Horizon 4:
Gears 5:
Metro Exodus:
Watch Dogs: Legion:
Red Dead Redemption 2:
Resizable BAR is an optional PCI Express interface technology. As you move through a world in a game, GPU memory (VRAM) constantly transfers textures, shaders and geometry via many small CPU to GPU transfers.
With the ever-growing size of modern game assets, this results in a lot of transfers. Using Resizable BAR, assets can instead be requested as-needed and sent in full, so the CPU can efficiently access the entire frame buffer.
And if multiple requests are made, transfers can occur concurrently, rather than queuing.
GeForce RTX 30 series laptops with Resizable BAR-capable Intel and AMD CPUs are now available to purchase. You need to check with each laptop manufacturer to confirm whether Resizable BAR is supported on that particular model.
For desktops, you will need a compatible CPU, compatible motherboard, motherboard SBIOS update, GPU VBIOS update (the GeForce RTX 3060 already ships with the necessary BIOS) and new GeForce Game Ready driver to enable Resizable BAR.
As per Nvidia’s recent press release statement, as of February 25th, 2021, the following CPU chipsets and CPUs support Resizable BAR on GeForce RTX 30 series desktop GPUs.
“Intel has been working with NVIDIA to enable Resizable BAR, an advanced PCI-Express technology, across the PC ecosystem,” said Fredrik Hamberger, GM of Premium & Enthusiast Laptop Segments at Intel.
“This feature can give gamers an extra boost in gameplay FPS on Intel’s new 11th generation H/S and select 10th generation systems when paired with supported graphics cards, including NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series GPUs.”
At the same time, NVIDIA is also working with motherboard manufacturers around the world to bring Resizable BAR support to compatible products.
As of February 25th, 2021, the following manufacturers are offering SBIOS updates for select motherboards to enable Resizable BAR with GeForce RTX 30 Series desktop graphics cards.
For enabling the Resizable BAR feature on any GeForce RTX 30 series GPU, after having updated your motherboard’s firmware/BIOS, you’ll need to update your GPU, and download the latest Nvidia game ready driver.
The GeForce RTX 3060 desktop graphics cards launched on February 25th, 2021, come with a pre-installed Resizable BAR-ready VBIOS. If you purchase one, all you need is a compatible motherboard and motherboard SBIOS, and the latest game ready driver.
Later on in March 2021, NVIDIA will release downloadable VBIOS updates for all Founders Edition GeForce RTX 30 series GPUs to enable Resizable BAR, and likewise, partners will release VBIOS updates for their custom models, too.
In practice, the performance benefits of Resizable BAR can vary substantially from game to game. According to NVIDIA’s own testing, some titles benefit from a few percent, up to 10%.
However, there are also titles that see a decrease in performance, so NVIDIA will be pre-testing titles and using game profiles to enable Resizable BAR only in games where it has a positive performance impact.
That way you won’t have to worry about bugs or performance decreases, and won’t have to rely on the community to benchmark each title and discover whether Resizable BAR is beneficial in the games you’re playing.
It remains to be seen when Nvidia will enable Resizable BAR support on its entire Ampere lineup of GPUs, or even offer support for previous gen Turing and Pascal GPU architecture lineup.
Stay tuned for more tech news!
Hello, my name is NICK Richardson. I’m an avid PC and tech fan since the good old days of RIVA TNT2, and 3DFX interactive “Voodoo” gaming cards. I love playing mostly First-person shooters, and I’m a die-hard fan of this FPS genre, since the good ‘old Doom and Wolfenstein days.
MUSIC has always been my passion/roots, but I started gaming “casually” when I was young on Nvidia’s GeForce3 series of cards. I’m by no means an avid or a hardcore gamer though, but I just love stuff related to the PC, Games, and technology in general. I’ve been involved with many indie Metal bands worldwide, and have helped them promote their albums in record labels. I’m a very broad-minded down to earth guy. MUSIC is my inner expression, and soul.
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decent performance plus ! It’s a good thing if you want some extra FPS just without doing any OC or other stuff. I like this new tech feature. Want to see this implemented in more games in future.
thanks for sharing this, MM.
decent performance plus ! It’s a good thing if you want some extra FPS just without doing any OC or other stuff. I like this new tech feature. Want to see this implemented in more games in future.
thanks for sharing this, MM.
I don’t think this feature need to be implemented in games. Any game can use it. But the effect does not always positive. In nvidia case they just enabled them for games that see performance benefit rather than enables them in all games.
10% is pretty huge for a free fps boost :O I’m literally shocked here that is this much of a difference. Yay? So will they add it for 3070/80 as well?
Yep, incoming VBIOS updates for 70/80/90 cards once tested, plus a mobo BIOS update too.
Sounds great. If only they were selling those cards as well lol. I guess when most people get their hands on the hardware, it will that much more sweet
Instead relying on some tech, game devs should optimize the games better.
optimize the games better ???? you mean like that almoste 10 years old scam citizen where you need a 3090 for stable 60fps at low settings ?
Good job making stuff up lol, the game has run fine for a while and despite you lacking any knowledge on this subject it actually runs quite well for what it’s doing.
making stuff up ?
https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/f51e91a34554fdc59962f84479bd10023207caa51af156beb27eab4a3ac7d055.jpg
so this is fake you say ?
some one isnt right here . is it star citizen or you ? or both ?
This is not game optimization issue.
Unless I missed out some detail, I keep wondering if it’s truly HW limitations that left the intel 9th gen and the rtx20xx cold in water..
z390 motherboards have had updates for resizable bar. z390 is for 8th and 9th gen intel so why would they enable it if it wouldn’t work? I’m confused.
Same here . What’s so different from the z290 line , really .
I just upgraded to a 5600x with a 3080 and my mobo already has support. Just waiting on Nvidia to put out the vbios update.
Good review of the tech! Would not be surprised if this will bring even more down the line once the titles/engines gfx asset handling get’s optimized for fully addressable vram rather than optimized for using the small portion it have direct access to now. Still really good numbers – Especially for a free upgrade 🙂
I’m still ever so slightly unclear – since this is PCI-E 3.0 compatible, does that means that older CPU/chipsets as far back as the 9900K series/Z390 will allow this feature as well assuming the manufacturer of the board provides a UEFI update for it? (I.e. ASUS)
I have a 9900K on the ASUS Z390 Maximus XI Hero and a 3090 Founder’s Edition and am curious if I’d be able to take advantage of this.
depends if asus releases a bios update , i have 9900k and 3090 too , but i m on z390 aorus master and they did release an update for resizable bar but now the wait is for the new vbios . and i assume asus would come out with a bios update too
Interesting technology, too bad there’s no cards available to make use of this tech though.
God, who cares if you can’t even get one.
Its Free FPS!! but in a time when GPU is not within our reach!
Decent results from a 3060. Did not expect this. Free FPS is always welcome!
it is a ”phantom” card like the others…nowhere to be found
It’s not that huge of a gain, sure 10% up to 10fps in games, you can get 5 with a light msiab OC and more with debloated lite win10 install, cpu oc etc Another ngreedia gimmick that is only available to 30 series rich people or fools who like to burn money. No reason at all this couldn’t come to previous generations other than ngreedia doing ngreedia.