Cyberpunk 2077 has a hidden Cinematic RTX mode
Cyberpunk 2077 may throw up a few glitches from time to time, but it's hard to deny that it's a pretty game. Especially if you've got the hardware to turn those ray tracing pretties on. An enterprising user, andwhat112 over at NexusMods (via Tom's Hardware), has discovered some hidden switches that go beyond what the game's interface normally offers, including something called Cinematic RTX.
Turning this on apparently improves level of detail settings, lighting, and ambient occlusion at the cost of 2GB more VRAM usage compared to the highest in-game settings. We were hard pushed to spot any difference, but your mileage may vary.
The good news is that you don't need to download anything, or do any hex editing to access this setting, you merely need to create a shortcut to the game and add a switch that will change its behaviour at load time.
If you're running the Steam version, you simply have to right-click the game, select properties, and under launch options, add -qualityLevel=Cinematic_RTX.
If you bought the game directly from GOG, then by default, the Cyberpunk2077.exe can be found in the C:\Program Files (x86)\Cyberpunk2077\bin\x64\ directory. Make your way there, right-click it and select "Create Shortcut" from the drop-down list. Right-click this shortcut and select Properties from the drop-down list and add the following to the Target box after what's already there:
-qualityLevel=Cinematic_RTX
Hit 'Ok' to save the changes and then launch the game from this shortcut and you should find you have all the pretties. Launch the game from the normal GOG launcher if you just want your normal settings, or you can change the CInematic_RTX bit to be one of the following instead:
- Low
- Medium
- High
- Ultra
- RTXMedium
- RTXUltra
- Cinematic
- CinematicEXR
- CinematixEXR_RTX
- SafeMode
- Console
- ConsolePro
- ConsoleEarlyNextGen
- ConsoleEarlyNextGenQuality
- GeForceNow
- IconsGeneration
- Auto
Some of them don't seem to work at all, such as the next-gen console options, but the normal settings seem to work just fine. Setting it SafeMode is potentially useful because if anything goes wrong, this should get you up and running again.