2 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Pc Gaming Archive

Archives for March 2025

Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Buying your Nvidia RTX 5080 or RTX 5090 from a food truck isn’t easy or cheap.

Nvidia’s latest GPU launch had PC gamers talking about a “paper launch” after limited quantities seemed to sell out instantly, but as PC World and Tom’s Hardware point out, there is one place you can grab a 5080 or 5090: this week’s GTC 2025 Conference.

Other than news about various AI projects, Nvidia is selling 1,000 of each variant for the standard price from its Gear Store Mobile Truck at spontaneous times... but only for attendees who may have already paid as much as $1,145 for a one-day conference pass.

Picture of the Nvidia GTC 2025 Gear Store, hosted inside a green food truck.
Nvidia’s GPU-stocked Gear Store for GTC 2025 attendees.
Image: Nvidia AI Developer (X)
Richard Lawler
Richard Lawler
Nvidia’s latest driver enables DLSS 4 override options for more games.

Aside from today’s AI announcements, Nvidia also updated the Game Ready GPU driver to version 572.83 and says it has significantly expanded the list of games where PC gamers can switch on DLSS 4 features like Multi Frame Generation, AI model upgrades, or additional performance modes.

Over 100 games and apps now support DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, and it says overrides for 62 titles have been added or updated since the last driver release. Check here for the full list.

Assassin’s Creed Shadows finally showed me the appeal of Ubisoft’s tentpole franchise

The setting fans have been waiting for does not fail to deliver.

Ash Parrish
Jay Peters
Jay Peters
PUBG UGC.

PUBG’s user-generated content (UGC) project, scheduled to launch in alpha this year, will let players make modes with their own rules, according to a 2025 roadmap for the game. A “world editing feature” is also in the works, “allowing players to place buildings and assets freely to create their own unique environments.”

It sounds a little like Fortnite’s creator tools.

Sean Hollister
Sean Hollister
Intel’s latest announcement is haunted by its open-source lie.

In 2021, Intel’s VP of graphics research Anton Kaplanyan tweeted that its XeSS super-resolution and framerate enhancing tech would be “open-source” and “coming soon.” Intel said it would be open-source numerous times.

Today, as Intel adds its newer XeSS 2 to GitHub, it still contains the line:

No reverse engineering, decompilation, or disassembly of the Software is permitted, nor any modification or alteration of the Software or its operation at any time, including during execution.

“We don’t have an update on open source,” Intel spokesperson Thomas Hannaford tells The Verge.

This gaming mouse has a striking skeletonized design and hot-swap batteries

Keyboard maker Angry Miao’s first crack at a mouse is a home run.

Antonio G. Di Benedetto