F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Bottleneck

Bottleneck

Bottleneck

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alyssataco
Junior Member
12
10-16-2016, 03:15 PM
#11
To operate at its best, a resource should ideally aim for around 65%.

Consider this: if you’re stuck in a grocery store checkout line and every cashier is completely occupied, would that be ideal?

Every game has some constraint – often the CPU or GPU.

Let's try a quick test: run your games but reduce the resolution and any excessive visual effects. This can really strain the graphics card. If you see your frames per second increase, it suggests your CPU is powerful enough to handle higher graphical settings. Conversely, if your FPS remains unchanged, you’re probably limited by your processor.
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alyssataco
10-16-2016, 03:15 PM #11

To operate at its best, a resource should ideally aim for around 65%.

Consider this: if you’re stuck in a grocery store checkout line and every cashier is completely occupied, would that be ideal?

Every game has some constraint – often the CPU or GPU.

Let's try a quick test: run your games but reduce the resolution and any excessive visual effects. This can really strain the graphics card. If you see your frames per second increase, it suggests your CPU is powerful enough to handle higher graphical settings. Conversely, if your FPS remains unchanged, you’re probably limited by your processor.

J
JKattack
Member
53
10-20-2016, 02:41 AM
#12
Let me be clear – those online bottleneck calculators are utterly useless. If someone suggests relying on one of these tools, you really shouldn’t take their computer advice seriously at all.
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JKattack
10-20-2016, 02:41 AM #12

Let me be clear – those online bottleneck calculators are utterly useless. If someone suggests relying on one of these tools, you really shouldn’t take their computer advice seriously at all.

G
Gds1
Junior Member
47
10-21-2016, 03:57 AM
#13
I really need it to operate at its full capacity for optimal results.
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Gds1
10-21-2016, 03:57 AM #13

I really need it to operate at its full capacity for optimal results.

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MegLovesHorses
Junior Member
4
10-25-2016, 04:29 AM
#14
You’ll want to rework Fortnite to really take advantage of your GTX 750 Ti.
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MegLovesHorses
10-25-2016, 04:29 AM #14

You’ll want to rework Fortnite to really take advantage of your GTX 750 Ti.

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GustoCraft
Junior Member
47
10-27-2016, 02:36 AM
#15
So, when people talk about “vest performance,” I assume they actually mean best performance. Do they specifically want to know if it refers to higher frames per second? Or perhaps fewer lags? It seems like if a graphics card is always maxed out at 100%, that suggests the CPU isn’t quite able to deliver its peak potential. Games naturally have fluctuating demands on both the CPU and GPU – there will be spikes and dips in resource usage. If one of those resources gets completely tied up, demanding all available power, it can definitely slow down your game while it waits for that resource to become free. Just because something is at 100% doesn’t automatically mean it's a good thing; what really matters is how satisfied you are with the overall gaming experience.
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GustoCraft
10-27-2016, 02:36 AM #15

So, when people talk about “vest performance,” I assume they actually mean best performance. Do they specifically want to know if it refers to higher frames per second? Or perhaps fewer lags? It seems like if a graphics card is always maxed out at 100%, that suggests the CPU isn’t quite able to deliver its peak potential. Games naturally have fluctuating demands on both the CPU and GPU – there will be spikes and dips in resource usage. If one of those resources gets completely tied up, demanding all available power, it can definitely slow down your game while it waits for that resource to become free. Just because something is at 100% doesn’t automatically mean it's a good thing; what really matters is how satisfied you are with the overall gaming experience.

1
101PINGO
Member
154
10-27-2016, 07:03 AM
#16
Do you now how to do that?
1
101PINGO
10-27-2016, 07:03 AM #16

Do you now how to do that?

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Marcustheduke
Senior Member
679
10-27-2016, 02:24 PM
#17
You
can't
do that.
M
Marcustheduke
10-27-2016, 02:24 PM #17

You
can't
do that.

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A_Sound
Senior Member
486
10-27-2016, 08:54 PM
#18
Thanks for all your help
A
A_Sound
10-27-2016, 08:54 PM #18

Thanks for all your help

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