Understanding NVIDIA Reflex MSFS and Frame Gen Latency

Ever tried landing a 747 at OR Tambo with a half-second delay? It is a recipe for disaster. Microsoft Flight Simulator (MSFS) is a visual masterpiece, but Frame Generation can sometimes make the controls feel like they are stuck in thick syrup. We are diving into NVIDIA Reflex MSFS performance to see if it actually fixes that frustrating input lag. ✨

How Frame Generation Affects Your Flight

When you enable DLSS 3, your GPU creates entirely new frames between the traditionally rendered ones. This makes the flight look incredibly smooth. However, those extra frames can introduce a slight queue in the rendering pipeline. This is where you might notice a delay between moving your joystick and seeing the plane react. To get the best out of this tech, you really need modern NVIDIA graphics cards that support the latest Ada Lovelace architecture.

The Role of NVIDIA Reflex in Reducing Lag

NVIDIA Reflex is designed specifically to clear this bottleneck. It synchronises the CPU and GPU... ensuring that the engine starts rendering the next frame the moment the CPU finishes processing your input. In MSFS, this is vital. If you are using high-end MSI graphics cards, you will likely see the 'Reflex Low Latency' option automatically toggle to 'On + Boost' when Frame Gen is active. 🔧

Real-World Performance: Does It Work?

Does it actually reduce Frame Gen latency? The short answer is yes. While Frame Generation adds a few milliseconds of overhead, Reflex often brings the total system latency back down to levels lower than if both features were off. It is the secret sauce that makes 60 FPS feel like 60 FPS... rather than a sluggish slideshow. Even if you are comparing this to AMD Radeon graphics cards and their own latency reduction tools, NVIDIA’s integration within the MSFS engine remains exceptionally tight. ⚡

Choosing the Right Hardware for Simulation

Not everyone is flying for leisure. For those building professional flight trainers or high-accuracy rigs, workstation graphics cards offer the stability needed for long-haul simulations. However, for the average pilot at home, the Reflex toggle is a must-use feature. Even budget-conscious flyers looking at Intel Arc graphics cards should keep an eye on how different vendors handle input lag... as it defines the entire experience in the cockpit. 🚀

TIP

MSFS Latency Pro Tip ⚡

Ensure 'Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling' is enabled in your Windows 11 settings. Without this, DLSS 3 Frame Generation cannot function... and you will miss out on the latency-busting benefits of NVIDIA Reflex in the cockpit. It can be the difference between a smooth touchdown and a bumpy arrival.

Final Thoughts on NVIDIA Reflex MSFS

If you are running a 40-series card, keeping Reflex enabled is a no-brainer. It effectively nullifies the latency penalty introduced by AI-generated frames. This ensures your inputs remain crisp while you enjoy the buttery-smooth visuals of a sunset over Cape Town.

Ready to Find Your Perfect Match? The quest for the smoothest flight experience is complex, but for maximum performance, choice, and value in South Africa, our GPU range is hard to beat. Explore our massive range of NVIDIA graphics cards and find the perfect machine to conquer the skies.