F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Check if Genshin Impact is running under 60 frames while using 60% of your GPU and CPU resources.

Check if Genshin Impact is running under 60 frames while using 60% of your GPU and CPU resources.

Check if Genshin Impact is running under 60 frames while using 60% of your GPU and CPU resources.

D
dimbuilder
Junior Member
8
11-14-2017, 08:53 PM
#1
Here is the video information rephrased:

A video of the problem is available at the provided link. The user reports high GPU/CPU usage around 60-70%, with VRAM at 2500. FPS fluctuates between 50 and 60. VSync is enabled, and they are using a 60Hz display. The system specifications include a GTX 980, an I7 4790k at 4.6GHz, 16GB DDR3 RAM (1600), and a Samsung Evo 860 SSD. The PC was recently formatted with the latest drivers, and the BIOS was updated to its newest version. Despite these changes, the issue persists.
D
dimbuilder
11-14-2017, 08:53 PM #1

Here is the video information rephrased:

A video of the problem is available at the provided link. The user reports high GPU/CPU usage around 60-70%, with VRAM at 2500. FPS fluctuates between 50 and 60. VSync is enabled, and they are using a 60Hz display. The system specifications include a GTX 980, an I7 4790k at 4.6GHz, 16GB DDR3 RAM (1600), and a Samsung Evo 860 SSD. The PC was recently formatted with the latest drivers, and the BIOS was updated to its newest version. Despite these changes, the issue persists.

Y
yorick1223
Junior Member
25
11-22-2017, 12:23 PM
#2
Turn off internet connection
Remove GPU driver via DDU (clean up carefully, avoid restarting to allow uninstallation of two drivers at once)
Disable all processors in Device Manager (continue process)
Y
yorick1223
11-22-2017, 12:23 PM #2

Turn off internet connection
Remove GPU driver via DDU (clean up carefully, avoid restarting to allow uninstallation of two drivers at once)
Disable all processors in Device Manager (continue process)

N
noah1277
Junior Member
45
11-22-2017, 08:54 PM
#3
Disconnect from the internet
Remove the GPU driver via DDU using clean method; avoid restarting to allow uninstallation of two drivers simultaneously without needing a reboot.
Uninstall all processors through Device Manager (ensure there are 8 listed, and when prompted for restart, select no).
Restart the PC into BIOS and update to the most recent BIOS version. After updating, return to BIOS and select default or optimized settings.
Power on the system and install the latest chipset driver.
Reboot the computer to BIOS, then connect to the internet.
Install the newest NVIDIA driver.
On the NVIDIA control panel, navigate to 3D settings and adjust power management to adaptive mode.
Proceed entirely offline until the reboot following the chipset driver installation; consider rebooting into BIOS afterward to apply XMP settings and ensure RAM is set on slots 2 and 4.
Download required files before starting step one, and follow instructions carefully.
Check for any available Windows updates and install them if present.
Enable Hardware Accelerated Graphics Scheduling (available in the latest Windows 10 update) within graphics settings, then restart.
Ensure the PSU connected to the GPU uses a single PCIe cable per slot (use the main cable, not the branches or splits).
N
noah1277
11-22-2017, 08:54 PM #3

Disconnect from the internet
Remove the GPU driver via DDU using clean method; avoid restarting to allow uninstallation of two drivers simultaneously without needing a reboot.
Uninstall all processors through Device Manager (ensure there are 8 listed, and when prompted for restart, select no).
Restart the PC into BIOS and update to the most recent BIOS version. After updating, return to BIOS and select default or optimized settings.
Power on the system and install the latest chipset driver.
Reboot the computer to BIOS, then connect to the internet.
Install the newest NVIDIA driver.
On the NVIDIA control panel, navigate to 3D settings and adjust power management to adaptive mode.
Proceed entirely offline until the reboot following the chipset driver installation; consider rebooting into BIOS afterward to apply XMP settings and ensure RAM is set on slots 2 and 4.
Download required files before starting step one, and follow instructions carefully.
Check for any available Windows updates and install them if present.
Enable Hardware Accelerated Graphics Scheduling (available in the latest Windows 10 update) within graphics settings, then restart.
Ensure the PSU connected to the GPU uses a single PCIe cable per slot (use the main cable, not the branches or splits).