Based on the screenshot Microsoft supplied, I think it looks not good, but I suspect Microsoft shouldn't have provided one: Those algorithms are intended to make scenes look better in motion, not on a static screen.
One new feature is Clarity Boost, which sharpens content in cloud-streamed games to compensate for the inevitable softness you experience in the compressed streams. In addition, Microsoft is updating its Edge browser to give it a little more gaming style and oomph. Microsoft didn't say whether it would be ready for the 2H22 update, though. But that's typically the option you get in a game, and given there's nothing useful in the operating system right now it'll be really welcome. The app sounds somewhat limited, letting you visually set shadow, midtone and highlight values for your monitor. Now, in its pre-Summer Game Fest announcements, the company is finally ready to add its HDR calibration app, which it first discussed in February, to preview. And in May, the company sent its new Xbox Controller Bar for Windows into beta: It lets you navigate some Xbox-related apps with your controller. In February, Microsoft began testing some updates to Windows 11 that improve performance when running DX11 or earlier games in a window (as opposed to full screen), notably to bring Auto HDR and Variable Refresh Rate to older games.