Futuremark 3dmark 2.29.8299 ~repack~ -

The standalone DLSS feature test within 3DMark 2.29.8299 now supports overlay correctly. Previous builds would sometimes misreport generated frames as native frames, inflating the performance delta. This version recalibrates the measurement logic for accuracy.

| GPU | Steel Nomad (Graphics) | Speed Way (Overall) | Port Royal | Time Spy Extreme | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | 8,924 | 10,218 | 24,501 | 14,897 | | AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX | 7,671 | 5,893 | 16,204 | 12,354 | | NVIDIA RTX 4080 Super | 7,068 | 8,122 | 19,273 | 12,101 | | AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT | 5,442 | 4,127 | 11,089 | 8,930 | Futuremark 3DMark 2.29.8299

For hardware reviewers, system integrators, and competitive overclockers operating on version 2.29.8299, the following protocols apply: The standalone DLSS feature test within 3DMark 2

This article explores the intricacies of version 2.29.8299, analyzing its features, benchmark tests, and why it remains a relevant tool for hardware diagnostics today. | GPU | Steel Nomad (Graphics) | Speed

The most significant change in 2.29.8299 is a patch for . Earlier 2.29 builds suffered from a CPU bottleneck on Zen 4 and Raptor Lake chips. Build 8299 redistributes draw call preparation across more threads, reducing frame time spikes. Consequently, Steel Nomad scores increased by approximately 2-4% on mid-range CPUs compared to build 8200 .