To show its support for gamers, Nvidia recently launched a driver that offers gaming experience optimization. The graphics card company acknowledges players' enthusiasm for the Rise of the Tomb Raider and the soon-to-arrive beta version of Tom Clancy's The Division, and its latest software shows exactly that.
Thanks to the updated driver, GeForce GPU owners will see a variety of issues resolved, alongside the much-expected support for Thunderbolt graphics, currently in beta only.
The 361.75 variant of the graphics driver holsters a neat list of fixes. For example, GeForce cards from notebooks will no longer crash in Photoshop CC 2015 and will be more stable overall. Also, the OEM promises that the Nvidia control panel will stop breaking at launch.
Good news in store for users of Windows versions newer than Vista: Nvidia repaired the GPU clock, which sometimes remained above idle on 144 Hz monitors to SLI configurations.
The latest driver release from Nvidia also offers beta support to users who want to run their GeForce GTX GPUs externally over Thunderbolt 3.
Looking at the manufacturer's list, an important number of cards receive the support. The list includes items such as the Titan X models, the GTX 900 series, the Geforce GTX 750 and Geforce GTX 750Ti.
If the beta testing phase goes smoothly, this opens up an array of possibilities for gamers who are on the go. With the Thunderbolt 3 support for external GTX graphics cards, ultraportable notebooks will be able to offer quite a gaming rig to players who value their mobility more than anything.
Last but not least, Nvidia's latest driver packs optimizations for the best gaming experience in acclaimed title Rise of the Tomb Raider and the anticipated Tom Clancy's The Division beta.
GeForce owners can head to Nvidia's page to download it right now, or simply access the GeForce Experience for the same result.
Nvidia also pushes new interesting products in the hardware segment.
According to a recent report from Hardware Battle, Nvidia will unleash two powerful mobile GPUs soon. The GeForce GTX 980MX and GeForce GTX 970MX are built so that notebook owners get a gaming experience that matches the one on a dedicated desktop gaming rig. If you're intrigued, read more about the technical assets of the two high-end GPUs.