Pragmata, Windrose, Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss and More Add NVIDIA DLSS Multi-Frame Gen Support

Apr 14, 2026 at 12:06pm EDT
The image shows a list of games supported by 'NVIDIA DLSS' including 'Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss,' 'Fragmentary Order,' 'Industria II,' 'Mongil: Starlight,' 'Pragmata,' and 'Windrose,' with the text “Accelerating performance in your favorite games” and the NVIDIA GeForce RTX logo.

Another batch of games has been confirmed to include support for NVIDIA's DLSS upscaling technology, with this list including some games that are out in a matter of days, like Pragmata, and others that have just been announced and won't release for a while, but will still arrive with support for the upscaler at launch.

Starting with the games due to release soon, as previously mentioned, Capcom's latest release, Pragmata, will launch with support for NVIDIA's DLSS Multi-Frame Gen support. It'll also support DLSS Ray Reconstruction and NVIDIA Reflex, all of which will be at their best on NVIDIA's latest RTX 50 Series graphics cards.

Related Story World of Tanks: HEAT, 007 First Light and Starminer All Arrive With NVIDIA DLSS 4.5 Multi-Frame Gen Support This Week

Which you can grab in a bundle with Pragmata as well, if you're looking for a reason to update your graphics card before prices get even worse than they have been as the memory crisis continues. Pragmata arrives this coming Friday, April 17, 2026, and if you're at all curious about Capcom's latest adventure, you should also check out Wccftech's Alessio Palumbo's review, and find out why Pragmata "feels like a return to old-school design."

The other games releasing soon with Multi-Frame Gen support include Windrose, the survival pirate adventure that was previously titled CrossWind. It actually launches in early access today, April 14, so you can jump into your sea-faring adventure with NVIDIA DLSS Multi-Frame Gen support that can also be upgraded to NVIDIA DLSS 4.5 through the NVIDIA app. It also supports DLSS Super Resolution which, again, can be updated to the 4.5 variant through the NVIDIA app.

MONGIL: Star Dive is also set to arrive this week on April 15, 2026, as is Industria 2, according to its Steam page at the time of this writing. Both will arrive with support for NVIDIA DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution and Multi-Frame Generation, and lastly, Cthulhu: The Cosmic Abyss, the upcoming Lovecraftian detective horror from developer Big Bad Wolf arrives on April 16, 2026 with support for DLSS 4.5 Dynamic Multi-Frame Generation.

It's also worth mentioning that Cthulhu has a demo available (the same we played back in February for Steam Next Fest), so if you want to test out all of your settings before jumping into the full release, you can.

Finally, the last game confirmed in this batch of titles that'll have DLSS with Multi-Frame Gen support at launch is the only one not releasing anytime soon. That game is Fragmentary Order, the latest extraction shooter announced from Escape From Tarkov director Nikita Buyanov, who opened up a new studio to explore this new project. Tarkov will continue as it always has under Battlestate, while this new project will be developed by a new team under Buyanov, Rant Gaming.

This game was just recently announced, so it won't be launching anytime soon, but when it does launch, it'll do so with support for NVIDIA's DLSS with Multi-Frame Gen. It may even arrive in time to support NVIDIA's new DLSS 5 technology, at which point it'll be interesting to see how much (or how little) of the tech has changed from its controversial reveal earlier this year.

About the author: David has been writing about videogames, technology, and culture since 2020, with a focus on reporting daily news across multiple publications, including GameDaily.Biz, GameSkinny, and PlayStation Universe before joining Wccftech in 2025. David started contributing as Canada/US reporter for Wccftech's gaming section in 2025. Besides being up-to-date on the industry's movements, he loves interviewing developers, reviewing games, and writing intricate essays about the symbolism and layered meanings to be found in rich narratives as he's done for publications like GamesIndustry.Biz, LostInCult, and others. Outside of games he loves movies, music, theatre, his hometown, and his family, though not necessarily in that order.

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