Check BIOS settings for RAM configuration, locate V RAM options, and modify the value as needed.
Check BIOS settings for RAM configuration, locate V RAM options, and modify the value as needed.
I'm a fan of intense gaming sessions. When people mention adjusting VRAM in BIOS, they usually mean where to tweak it—often related to graphics settings or system performance. With MSI's BIOS 4, you might need to check the graphics card settings or memory configuration there.
Which graphics card do you have? That’s needed so the game runs correctly.
Only legacy onboard graphics options (possibly AMD APUs) let you control vRAM or video memory. These units don’t have separate dedicated storage; all functions are merged to save space and power, using your main system RAM instead. This means the BIOS lets you specify how much of your RAM should be reserved for these graphics. Newer integrated graphics handle memory more smartly—they adjust usage dynamically, usually capping at around 1GB on systems with 2GB+ RAM. Because of this, the BIOS feature is no longer available. Modern setups also rely on dedicated cards from Nvidia and AMD as backup, so performance drops only when the graphics card hits its limit. If you see error messages, check if they assume an onboard solution or if your system has exceeded memory limits.