For upscaling old DVD rips of 90s anime, Gaia remains best, but 2.3.0 adds "Line Art Mode" to the Gaia model, which prevents thick outlines from bleeding into white backgrounds.
The headline feature of v2.3.0 was speed. Prior to this update, processing high-resolution video could take an excruciatingly long time, often rendering the software impractical for lengthy projects. topaz video enhance ai 2.3.0
While previous versions (2.0, 2.1, 2.2) focused on stability and GUI improvements, Topaz Video Enhance AI 2.3.0 focuses on three pillars: accuracy, speed optimization for Nvidia 40-series cards, and new AI models. For upscaling old DVD rips of 90s anime,
The engine of Topaz Video Enhance AI is not a single algorithm, but a collection of "models" trained for specific tasks. Version 2.3.0 refined the user's ability to choose the right tool for the job. Issue: Exported video has no audio
The AI could automatically detect and crop black bars, then upscale only the active video area—critical for converting 4:3 letterboxed content to 16:9 without wasted pixels.
No software is perfect. Here are known quirks of this specific version and how to fix them.
You have archival interview footage (480i SD). Use the Deinterlace filter combined with Iris MQ. Version 2.3.0 has corrected a field-order bug (Upper vs. Lower First) that caused stutter in 2.2.0.