DirectStorage debuted in the Xbox Series X|S as a method to improve load times for games and naturally Microsoft leveraged it for Windows as well with DirectStorage 1.0 making its way first to Windows 11 and then Windows 10 in March. The original method could reduce load times in games by up to 40% on laptops or desktops with a compatible NVMe drive, but DirectStorage 1.1 ups the ante with load times up to an additional three times faster (via Windows Central). In a DirectX Developer Blog (opens in new tab) post Microsoft showed off an optimized sample (pictured above) illustrating the potential gains of GPU decompression versus CPU decompression with the load time dropping from 2.36 seconds to just 0.8 seconds under DirectStorage 1.1. While DirectStorage 1.0 improved the speed of the data transfer, which in turn reduced CPU overhead, DirectStorage 1.1 focuses on GPU decompression. In the past, this task was entirely on the CPU, but now it can be offloaded to the GPU and working in concert with a high-speed NVMe drive it can result in near instantaneous load times. So what’s the catch? Well other than having a gaming laptop with an NVMe drive and a DirectX 12 capable GPU with support for Shader Model 6.0 to pull this off, developers also need to implement the feature in their games. That has proven a challenge with DirectStorage 1.0 to date, so we’ll have to see if this next leap is enough to bring developers on board.