![]() But then you may wish to set a Max Refresh Rate limit on Nvidia console, per above. I also recommend turning on Triple-buffering on this screen, which keeps the rendering pipeline unblocked. (I like 4x for 4k displays… 8x for anything less than 4k. Once you reach the monitors refresh rate cap G-Sync disengages and then true V-Sync kicks in. V-Sync acts like a helper to G-Sync while G-Sync is engaged. I recommend cranking up the anti-aliasing to smooth the jaggies on the side of the HUD. Turn on G-Sync and V-Sync in Nvidia Control Panel, cap your FPS to 3-5 below your monitors refresh rate cap. the 3D view will always be the native resolution and refresh-rate, of the selected monitor on your Windows desktop. These settings are also confusing … because again, if you run borderless mode (recommended, default) some of the selections simply won’t apply. ![]() But this really depends on what frame-rate you’re trying to achieve, and g-sync and v-sync considerations.įor everything else, the defaults seem ok. I do recommend setting a Max Refresh Rate limit, if you run with triple-buffering enabled… which I recommend, for most. On the 3D settings page… in theory I like Low Latency Mode but in practice I haven’t measured it to have any effect with BMS. This prevents the PC from ever trying to switch the monitor to different resolution / refresh-rates. Beginning with the NVIDIA Driver version 461. I do like to set “perform scaling on GPU” (on the desktop-size-and-position page) which forces Image Scaling = On. ![]() Here are the settings that you should change from defaults: Low Latency Mode to Ultra. Which allows you to scan input at higher rate than rate images are displayed to you. The best Nvidia Control Panel settings for PC gaming. Fast Sync Do not send every frame to monitor if fps > monitors refresh rate. Which is fine for games where input lag is tolerable. These settings are somewhat confusing … if you run borderless mode (recommended, default) many of the selections on the NVidia console (and BMS graphics page) simply won’t apply. Adaptive Sync enable VSync if fps > monitors refresh rate. For a 6-core system with GTX 1650, I’d probably recommend it – unless you’re maxing out your GPU (keep an eye on TaskMgr). ![]() In borderless-window mode, BMS even seems to support the Windows 10 “fullscreen optimizations” well, as of 4.35.x and later.įor Win10 21H2, I keep Game Mode = On and I add ‘Falcon BMS.exe’ to the list of desktop apps to prefer high-performance mode, although I’m not sure the latter really does anything.įor NVidia 10-series and later, you can turn on HAGS (hardware-accel GPU scheduling) on the “Graphics Settings” page, which will reduce CPU load from DWM.exe but maybe add a little (?) GPU workload. What is your OS? And native monitor resolution / refresh-rate.Īs of 4.36 the defaults are all pretty good… both in-game, NVidia console, and OS settings. ![]()
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