Yeah, people often ignore this aspect when comparing mods with official patches.
If a mod introduces a game breaking bug that screws your save 20 hours in, or if it causes incompatibilities with some subset of hardware, the mod developer will just update their Nexus Mods pages with "tehehe, sorry guys, I've made an ooopsie".
If the official game developer ships the same issues, it would be a catastrophe that would cause problems for many paying customers and even full blown refunds.
I love mods, but there's a massive difference in the number of steps and QC needed for a modder to introduce a new feature vs the official devs.
In the case of DLSS though, it should have been here from day one - and it probably would've been if the game didn't have so many ties with AMD.
the mod developer will just update their Nexus Mods pages with "tehehe, sorry guys, I've made an ooopsie".
Which boggles my mind. I made a couple of Skyrim mods years ago, and ended up deleting everything out of shame when someone spotted a bug where a related questline was broken across saves, thinking I was the cause. Turns out it was avtually Bethesda's fault, but I still haven't made a mod since