Latest Nvidia drivers cull support for Kepler and Windows 7/8

GeForce GTX 600 and 700 cards no longer get major driver updates.

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Nvidiawarned this day was coming, but it’s finally arrived. Here we are in the spookiest month of the year, staring down the truest horror of all: forsaken technology.

While the latest Game Ready driver (version 496.13) brings optimised support for Back 4 Blood, the Crysis Remastered trilogy, and Baldur’s Gate 3, among others, in the same fell swoop, it abandons not only Windows 7, 8 and 8.1, but also support for Kepler GPUs.

After sometoing and froingon the subject, confirmation came that GPUs touting Kepler architecture—launched some 12 years ago—would soon be loosing driver support. Kepler is found powering Nvidia’s 600-series cards along with a good chunk of its 700-series offerings too. You can find a list ofnow-unsupported cards here.

Those packing a GeForce GTX 750 Ti or GTX 750 will be pleased to know their GPU’s are safe for the time being, however, as these cards are built around not Kepler, but the same Maxwell architecture as the GTX 900-Series.

Going forward, the Kepler cards will still work just fine, and they’ll still get security updates up until September 2024 as well, but optimal support for the very latest games simply won’t be available.

To be fair, performance in the newest titles won’t exactly be stellar on such hardware anyway—it’s just a shame that Nvidia is doing this now when actuallybuying an up to date graphics card is so difficult. If you’re still running older hardware, your options for upgrading are very limited right now.

Also of note is that this new driver release is only for Windows 10 and Windows 11. Nvidia no longer supports Windows 7, Windows 8, or Windows 8.1. According to thelatest Steam surveythe vast majority of users have moved over to Windows 10 anyway, with Windows 7 coming in at just under 5% of the market, and poor Windows 8.1 sitting on less than 1%.

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News of support dropping is unsurprising, what with Windows 11’s recent launch and GeForce RXT 30-Series cards reaching a zenith. It seems only right we lay these ancient operating systems and video cards to rest.

That way Nvidia can focus on usheringJen-Hsun’s utopian visionsof the future. You can grab the496.13 Nvidia Game Ready driverright now, so you don’t get left behind.

The new driver also brings with itimproved DLSS support for a swathe of games, including Rise of the Tomb Raider, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, and Chivalry 2. As such, it looks like Nvidia is bolstering support for its AI-powered upscaling, probably as a response to the healthy uptake enjoyed by AMD’s FSR technology.

Or maybe in preparation for itre-releasing the RTX 2060? Either way, it’s good to see more games supporting DLSS.

Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He’s very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.

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