Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddessis the latest action title from CAPCOM, now available on PC and consoles. The PC version runs quite well on a wide variety of hardware, and there are tons of settings to tweak, similar to recent RE Engine titles. A common visual flaw in many RE Engine games is visible dithering that can often stand out quite a bit and get in the way of image clarity. Here is how you reduce and almost eliminate the dithering effect in Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess on PC.

Reduce Dithering in Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess

Toreduce ditheringinKunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess, you need to use the FXAA + TAA anti-aliasing optioncombined with110%to120%value forimage quality.

Here is a comparison between the base anti-aliasing options available. FXAA and TAA are much better than SMAA, which has tons of dithering, but TAA can introduce some blurriness, especially at 1080p.

Anti-aliasing Comparison Kunisu-Gami

The FXAA + TAA setting looks almost perfect, but there’s still minor dithering that can be smoothed using a higher value of Image Quality, like 110% or 120%, at the cost of some performance.

In the screenshot above, 120% almost completely removes the effect. If you go higher to around 150%, the image quality will be crystal clear, but it comes with a hefty performance requirement.

Increased IQ in Anti-aliasing Comparison Kunisu-Gami

However, if you have an NVIDIA GPU, you may enable DLSS and enjoy an improved experience with the visual uplift, especially if you’re playing at 1440p or 4K. At 1080p, the reconstruction is great, but not as good as native.

Overall, even if you go for simple TAA, you’ll start noticing a decrease in dithering. Additionally, we recommend that you don’t turn down the Image Quality option below 100% because it will introduce even more dithering which can look quite unpleasant.

For more on Kunitsu-Gami: Path of the Goddess, make sure tocheck out our dedicated section.

Ali Hashmi

Ali has been writing about video games for the past six years and is always on the lookout for the next indie game to obsess over and recommend to everyone in sight. When he isn’t spending an unhealthy amount of time in Slay the Spire, he’s probably trying out yet another retro-shooter or playing Dark Souls for the 50th time.