Minecraft with RTX ray tracing is finally arriving in beta on April 16
Minecraft launched 10 years ago, but it continues to be one of the most-played games. With 112 million players and over 100 billion views for Minecraft-related videos in 2019 alone, it’s clear that there’s a lot of interest in the game.
Minecraft has been teasing an update with overhauled visuals for some time now, and we now have more details on the same. The first beta build of Minecraft with NVIDIA’s RTX ray tracing features is set to go live on April 16 from 10 a.m. PT.
Minecraft with RTX brings immersive visuals and realistic lighting effects to the sandbox game, with NVIDIA adding path tracing — the “most advanced form of ray tracing” — to the Windows 10 version of the game. Here’s what that entails, straight from NVIDIA:
- Direct lighting from the sun, sky and various light sources
- Realistic hard and soft shadows
- Emissive lighting from surfaces such as glowstone and lava
- Global illumination
- Transparent materials such as stained glass, water and ice with reflection and refraction
- Accurate reflections in water and metallic surfaces
- Volumetric fog and light shafts
NVIDIA says it is also adding ray tracing to physical objects, allowing for light, reflections, and shadows to bounce off in-game objects. And as path tracing is visually intensive, NVIDIA is bringing DLSS 2.0 — its AI-assisted upscaling tech that relies on dedicated TEnsor cores on RTX cards — to the game, stating it will boost frame rates while delivering the same image quality. As you can probably imagine, Minecraft looks very different with RTX enabled:
- Aquatic Adventure RTX by Dr_Bond
- Color, Light and Shadow RTX by PearlescentMoon
- Crystal Palace RTX by GeminiTay
- Imagination Island RTX by BlockWorks
- Neon District RTX by Elysium Fire
- Of Temples and Totems RTX by Razzleberries
Of course, one of Minecraft’s main draws is its 8-bit visual style, so if you don’t want to enable the new RTX features, you don’t have to. NVIDIA is adding a hotkey to toggle RTX features on and off in-game, and you can also manually disable the feature in the game’s settings.
The public release is slated for release sometime around the end of the year, with NVIDIA noting that Microsoft has final say on when the stable build will go live.
Now with RTX
Minecraft
Add a new dimension to Minecraft
NVIDIA’s RTX ray tracing features will let you see Minecraft in an entirely new light. With updated visuals and life-like lighting effects and upgraded texture, this is an update that you should try out if you have an RTX video card.