Find information on the latest required Windows and Linux drivers, minimum requirements for VR/XR runtimes, VRED Core updates, and installation changes.
For Windows users, the minimum NVIDIA driver required is v.536.67 or above for RGB raytracing and v.551.23 for spectral raytracing. To use DLSS RR, you will need the NVIDIA driver v.537.13 or above; otherwise, VRED will default to the DLSS from version 2024.1.
For Linux users, the minimum NVIDIA driver required is v.535.86 or above for RGB raytracing and v.550.54 for spectral raytracing. To use DLSS RR, you will need the NVIDIA driver v.535.104 or above; otherwise, VRED will default to the DLSS from version 2024.1.
For VR/XR, the minimum requirements regarding runtimes are the following:
We added the option, Automatic ISO Adaption, to automatically adjusts the camera sensor's ISO when the F-Stop or shutter speed changes to maintain consistent brightness. Find it in the Camera Editor > Image Processing tab > Tonemapping section.
This is the default setting when opening a new scene; therefore, this is a changed usability behavior.
For VRED Core on Linux, as of 2025, the package, xcb-util-cursor
, is a mandatory dependency. This is a prerequisite for any Qt 6.5 application to run on RedHat 8 or RedHat 9. The Qt libraries cannot be loaded without it and the following warning will appear if it is missing, "QtWarning: From 6.5.0, xcb-cursor0 or libxcb-cursor0 is needed to load the Qt xcb platform plugin".
A bootstrap file can be downloaded from Accounts after a user has made a selection regarding what and how to install (i.e., Download install or Custom install).
Float values now have a precision of 6. This means 1000.123 will be displayed as 1000.12 and 1000.129 as 1000.13.
We updated the following SDKs:
MaterialX SDK version to 1.39
MDL SDK version to 2024.0.1
We updated the OpenH264 codec version to 2.4.1.
To find a list of the latest file formats and versions supported by VRED, see VRED Supported File Formats.
To find what was added and changed in the VRED Python API v2 for each release, see What's New in Python API V1 and V2.
If working on a Linux machine, set your local directory to /var/opt/Autodesk
with write access on the Linux machine that is running the current version of the VRED Render Node.