The "new" part of this patch isn't a feature; it's a relay race handoff . SCS handed the torch from the legacy DX9 engine to the modern DX11 engine. Drop the old mods, update your GPU drivers, and enjoy a smoother, better-looking Europe.

Published by: [Your Site Name] | Category: Euro Truck Simulator 2 Updates

For multiplayer users (TruckersMP), note that the client requires 1.36 or higher. As of 2024, 1.35 support has been dropped entirely. Yes—with one caveat. If your hardware supports DX11 (and 99.9% of gaming PCs built after 2012 do), the 1.36 patch is superior in every measurable way: visual fidelity, frame timing, and future mod support.

If you are still running version 1.35 and are looking at the , you are standing at the crossroads of legacy OpenGL support and the future of DX11. This article covers everything you need to know: the new features, the hidden performance tweaks, the breaking changes for mods, and the safest way to make the jump. The Big Picture: Why 1.36 Was a "Silent Revolution" While 1.35 was celebrated for the German rework and trailer ownership, the 1.36 update (publicly released in late 2019, but still relevant for legacy patches today) appeared smaller on the surface. The patch notes looked modest: "Rendering changes" and "Map additions." However, under the hood, SCS Software did something drastic.

Ets2 135 To 136 Patch New <Direct>

The "new" part of this patch isn't a feature; it's a relay race handoff . SCS handed the torch from the legacy DX9 engine to the modern DX11 engine. Drop the old mods, update your GPU drivers, and enjoy a smoother, better-looking Europe.

Published by: [Your Site Name] | Category: Euro Truck Simulator 2 Updates ets2 135 to 136 patch new

For multiplayer users (TruckersMP), note that the client requires 1.36 or higher. As of 2024, 1.35 support has been dropped entirely. Yes—with one caveat. If your hardware supports DX11 (and 99.9% of gaming PCs built after 2012 do), the 1.36 patch is superior in every measurable way: visual fidelity, frame timing, and future mod support. The "new" part of this patch isn't a

If you are still running version 1.35 and are looking at the , you are standing at the crossroads of legacy OpenGL support and the future of DX11. This article covers everything you need to know: the new features, the hidden performance tweaks, the breaking changes for mods, and the safest way to make the jump. The Big Picture: Why 1.36 Was a "Silent Revolution" While 1.35 was celebrated for the German rework and trailer ownership, the 1.36 update (publicly released in late 2019, but still relevant for legacy patches today) appeared smaller on the surface. The patch notes looked modest: "Rendering changes" and "Map additions." However, under the hood, SCS Software did something drastic. Published by: [Your Site Name] | Category: Euro