

- #GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU DRIVERS#
- #GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU UPDATE#
- #GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU WINDOWS 10#
- #GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU PRO#
This was particularly during fog weather where the FPS really took a beating. I can maintain around 100+ fps generally, but it can drop as low as 57 fps I've noticed (haven't seen it drop any lower than that). Recently I've tried playing with the Nvidia GeForce optimised settings, which basically maxes everything. With those settings I would get mostly around 100+ fps most of the time, with drops as low as 70-80 during intense scenes in the city, explosions etc. And the Advanced Graphics all off (like extended shadows, and draw distance etc) I've experimented with a mix of all the regular display settings maxed except MSAA set to 4x. Please if there's other details I can provide let me know (and how I can retrieve/find them). I can't think of anything else right now that might be relevant to determining any performance impacts.

Ghost Recon Wildlands, which runs nicely capped at 80 FPS running all settings maxed, and 1.20x resolution scaling) For some games I have created a specific profile where I framerate limit them further (e.g. I also have RivaTunerStatisticsServer running with a global framerate limit of 136. I have MSI Afterburner running with my own Fan speed curve so it ramps up a bit faster than the default, although temperature with my GPU has never been an issue (I've had the GPU since January). I also use it's RAM SmartTrim feature to clear the standby memory past a certain point.
#GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU PRO#
I have Process Lasso Pro and use the default "Bitsum Highest Performance" power plan.
#GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU WINDOWS 10#
I run Windows 10 Professional 圆4, I have disabled "Superfetch" in the services and I have Windows 10's Gaming Mode turned off. My Nvidia Control Panel settings are as follows: I definitely noticed a huge difference in performance in games when following this and applying the settings in Nvidia Control Panel as well as using RTSS. Hasn't made a noticable difference but thought it was worth a try.Ī month or so back I came across this article and followed it: I didn't know about how the whole G-Sync stuff works, or Vsync, or what my settings should be.
#GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU DRIVERS#
Completely removed my Nvidia drivers and software and downloaded and installed them fresh again.
#GHOST RECON BREAKPOINT BENCHMARK CPU UPDATE#
So I just selected one of the 4000Mhz XMP profiles and haven't had any issues, even with Need For Speed Heat that usually crashes within 5-10mins I played for over an hour for good measure and had no crashes.Īlso after my BIOS update the other day I gave the "Display Driver Uninstaller" tool a go. Since a few days ago I updated my BIOS version to 3.60 and the 3600Mhz XMP Profile appears to have been replaced, both my XMP profiles show the same 4000Mhz profile settings. I had my RAM set to use the XMP Profile of 3600Mhz (running it on the other XMP profile of 4000Mhz caused Battlefield V and Need For Speed Heat to crash but apparently that's common with high frequency RAM and those games).


First I'll share specs, some of my settings (please let me know if I can provide more detail), and then some of my benchmark results. I don't feel like my build is performing as well as it should be when it comes to gaming.
