In just a few years, the photo-realism of images synthesized by Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) has gone from somewhat reasonable to almost perfect largely by increasing the complexity of the networks, e.g., adding layers, intermediate latent spaces, style-transfer parameters, etc. This trajectory has led many of the state-of-the-art GANs to be inaccessibly large, disengaging many without large computational resources. Recognizing this, we explore a method for squeezing additional performance from existing, low-complexity GANs. Formally, we present an unsupervised method to find a direction in the latent space that aligns with improved photo-realism. Our approach leaves the network unchanged while enhancing the fidelity of the generated image. We use a simple generator inversion to find the direction in the latent space that results in the smallest change in the image space. Leveraging the learned structure of the latent space, we find moving in this direction corrects many image artifacts and brings the image into greater realism. We verify our findings qualitatively and quantitatively, showing an improvement in Frechet Inception Distance (FID) exists along our trajectory which surpasses the original GAN and other approaches including a supervised method. We expand further and provide an optimization method to automatically select latent vectors along the path that balance the variation and realism of samples. We apply our method to several diverse datasets and three architectures of varying complexity to illustrate the generalizability of our approach. By expanding the utility of low-complexity and existing networks, we hope to encourage the democratization of GANs.