Today, it costs $7 and a few minutes of configuration.
It is a synthetic sugar pill for your eyes. But it is an incredibly effective one. On a GTX 1060, using LS V3.0.0.1, you can play Cyberpunk 2077 at visually smooth 75 FPS. Five years ago, that would have required a $1,000 GPU upgrade. Lossless Scaling V3.0.0.1
If you’ve heard whispers about “turning 30 FPS into 120 FPS on a GTX 1060” or “frame generation for emulators,” you have heard about Lossless Scaling V3.0.0.1. But is it magic? Is it a hoax? And crucially, how do you make it work? Today, it costs $7 and a few minutes of configuration
In the ever-evolving landscape of PC gaming optimization, few tools have generated as much excitement—and confusion—as Lossless Scaling . For years, this small utility sat in the shadow of giants like DLSS 3 (Nvidia) and FSR 3 (AMD). Then came version 3.0.0.1. This update didn't just tweak performance; it fundamentally rewrote the rules of what budget hardware can achieve. On a GTX 1060, using LS V3