AMD Adrenalin 25.6.1 Adds Radeon RX 9060 XT and FSR 4 Support: Big Boost, Some Bugs
AMD has officially dropped its Adrenalin Edition 25.6.1 driver update, bringing full support for the new Radeon RX 9060 XT and expanding FSR 4 support to more titles. With this release, AMD is pushing its RDNA 4 lineup further into the spotlight, catering to both gamers and workstation users.
The RX 9060 XT – based on the Navi 44 GPU – now integrates seamlessly with the Adrenalin software. Offered in both 8 GB and 16 GB versions, this GPU joins the RX 9070 series in benefiting from tighter software optimization. AMD also added support for the Radeon AI Pro R9700, a powerful 32 GB GDDR6 workstation card built on RDNA 4 architecture.
One of the biggest highlights is the expanded list of games compatible with AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 4 (FSR 4). An additional 14 games now support the upscaling tech, pushing the total beyond 55. While it still lags behind NVIDIA’s DLSS 4 support (with 125+ titles), AMD is clearly accelerating. Ten more games – including Crimson Desert, Mecha Break, and the Hawaii-themed Like a Dragon: Pirate Yakuza – are queued for upcoming support.
Newly supported FSR 4 games include:
- F1 25
- Frostpunk 2
- Star Wars Outlaws
- Virtua Fighter 5 R.E.V.O
- Legacy: Steel & Sorcery
- Stellar Blade
- Wild Assault
- QANGA
- Deadzone: Rogue
- Lords of the Fallen
- Planetaries
- Runescape: Dragonwilds
- Rem Survival
- Steel Seed
However, the update isn’t flawless. AMD acknowledges issues with Marvel’s Spider-Man 2 and The Last of Us Part I, specifically when Ray Tracing is enabled – causing intermittent crashes. Despite that, users are reporting better overall driver stability compared to the buggy May version (25.5.2).
The release also hints at performance refinement under the hood. Hardware enthusiasts have dissected die sizes and confirmed that Navi 44 delivers a balanced spec with 32 CUs, 128 TMUs, and 64MB of L3 cache, well-suited for the midrange segment. Yet, one ongoing criticism from the community is AMD’s limitation of FSR 4 to RDNA 4 GPUs – a move seen by many as forced obsolescence for older hardware users.
Still, fans of full AMD rigs and value-driven performance are likely to see this release as a step in the right direction – especially with AMD finally catching up in AI frame generation technologies and GPU software maturity.
1 comment
Nvidia fans still bragging about DLSS4, but FSR4 looks way more open. I’ll wait for benchmarks tho