Rtgi 0.17.0.2 📌 📍
However, a note of caution: RTGI is not a miracle worker. Because it is a post-process effect (it only sees the 2D final image and the depth buffer), it cannot handle data that isn't on the screen. If a light source is behind the camera, RTGI cannot bounce it. For that, you need native engine raytracing (like Cyberpunk 2077's Psycho mode).
Early benchmarks suggest a 15-20% performance gain over version 0.16 on the same hardware (tested on an RTX 3060 and RX 6700 XT). A persistent issue with post-process ray tracing is "haloing"—where an object in the foreground bleeds light information from the background. Version 0.17.0.2 implements a stricter depth rejection parameter . This reduces the "ghosting" effect behind moving characters substantially, though it may require slight tweaking per game. Installation Guide: Getting RTGI 0.17.0.2 Running Because RTGI is a paid shader (available via Patreon), the installation process differs from standard free ReShade effects. rtgi 0.17.0.2
If you have been on the fence about subscribing to the Patreon, this is the version to get. Download it, inject it into an old favorite, and watch shadows come alive. However, a note of caution: RTGI is not a miracle worker
Have you tested RTGI 0.17.0.2 in a unique game? Share your screenshots and performance logs in the community forums. For that, you need native engine raytracing (like
The algorithm now better differentiates between "new light information" and "temporal noise." Users will notice that static scenes look plastic-smooth, while moving objects retain a natural grain without the dancing pixels of older iterations. Ray tracing is notoriously expensive. However, RTGI 0.17.0.2 includes a new Adaptive Ray Count . Instead of casting the same number of rays across the entire screen, the shader intelligently reduces ray counts in darker, shadowed areas where high precision is unnecessary, and focuses compute power on brightly lit surfaces.
