
I had previously gotten 3d vision to work through the method of modifying nv_dispi.inf to add GTX 1650 into 425.31, however, my framerate was terrible, I could get 3d movies to play just fine but games did not get more than about 20fps. GTX 1650 was not included in 425.31 because it was released later than gtx 1660. I followed your steps to get the GTX 1650 working in windows 8.1. Thank you Neovad, this solution is exactly what I needed.
#Do i need 3d vision controller install#
If you have 3D Vision hardware, you can also install the USB driver by using right-click on the.

And the 3D was running for all tests I did outside of UE4 games, which are known crashing on Win 10 1903. I unzipped and fetched the 3D Vision driver, tweaked the version using FVIE, and then installed normally.ģ) Unzip the driver installer, then find the 3DVision folder and unzip the 3DVision.exe package.Ĥ) Run the FVIE version editor, and change the NvSCPAPI.dll and NvSCPAPI64.dll versions to 4.3186ĥ) Run the Setup.exe in the folder to install 3D Vision.Ħ) At activation, choose Discover for red/blue anaglyph. Then I followed Losti's steps manually, but without ever installing 425.31. Then, I installed the 431.86 driver, which is fully supported by RTX Super cards. My test was to DDU remove my previous driver, which theoretically will remove all traces of the 425.31. With the caveat being that I don't have one to test exactly. I think it definitely IS possible to install 3D Vision for an RTX Super. I just studied this scenario for a HelixVision question (might be same person).

Losti wrote:The Support is comingfrom the driver, the lateset official 3D vision driver does not support a SUPER card, means no 3D Vision is supported.īUT you can install the latest driver and get 3D vision patched into it so the super card is supported and this means 3d vision is supported.
