F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking DayZ Help question

DayZ Help question

DayZ Help question

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angelcake_11
Senior Member
540
09-21-2016, 01:25 PM
#1
I'm curious about whether these components—Intel Pentium G3258, GTX 750 TI, and 4GB DDR3 RAM—can support DayZ running smoothly with solid performance, around 25 FPS in towns and 45 FPS outside. Let me know if you'd like help checking that.
A
angelcake_11
09-21-2016, 01:25 PM #1

I'm curious about whether these components—Intel Pentium G3258, GTX 750 TI, and 4GB DDR3 RAM—can support DayZ running smoothly with solid performance, around 25 FPS in towns and 45 FPS outside. Let me know if you'd like help checking that.

3
3gilad3
Senior Member
735
10-09-2016, 07:34 PM
#2
Probably, but it won’t look good. The issue with DayZ is that it demands significant CPU power. 4GB of RAM might not be enough either, since I usually use 8+ GB during play (with a total of 24).

The optimal CPU clock speed is what you need.
Ensure your graphics settings are set to normal or high, not low. Low settings force the game to rely on the CPU for rendering, which severely impacts performance. The 750ti GPU can handle playing the game at high settings as long as your CPU is fast enough.
3
3gilad3
10-09-2016, 07:34 PM #2

Probably, but it won’t look good. The issue with DayZ is that it demands significant CPU power. 4GB of RAM might not be enough either, since I usually use 8+ GB during play (with a total of 24).

The optimal CPU clock speed is what you need.
Ensure your graphics settings are set to normal or high, not low. Low settings force the game to rely on the CPU for rendering, which severely impacts performance. The 750ti GPU can handle playing the game at high settings as long as your CPU is fast enough.

T
TKDragon99
Junior Member
45
10-10-2016, 12:22 PM
#3
Probably, but it won't look good. The issue with DayZ is that it demands significant CPU power. 4GB of RAM might not be sufficient either, since I usually use 8+ GB during play (with a total of 24).

The optimal CPU clock speed is what you require.
Ensure the graphics settings are set to normal or high, not low. Low settings force the game to rely on the CPU for rendering, which severely impacts performance. The 750ti has enough GPU power to run the game at high settings as long as your CPU is fast.
T
TKDragon99
10-10-2016, 12:22 PM #3

Probably, but it won't look good. The issue with DayZ is that it demands significant CPU power. 4GB of RAM might not be sufficient either, since I usually use 8+ GB during play (with a total of 24).

The optimal CPU clock speed is what you require.
Ensure the graphics settings are set to normal or high, not low. Low settings force the game to rely on the CPU for rendering, which severely impacts performance. The 750ti has enough GPU power to run the game at high settings as long as your CPU is fast.

Q
q_ZoRo_p
Junior Member
34
10-11-2016, 09:55 AM
#4
Firefoxx04:
It's likely, but the graphics won't look great. Dayz demands significant CPU power. Even with 4GB of RAM, using 8+ GB is common during play (I have 24 total). The best clock speed matters. Adjust graphics settings to normal or high, never low. Low forces the CPU to handle graphics, which ruins performance. The 750ti has enough GPU power for high settings on a fast CPU. If I had an Intel core i5 4460, would it work well?
Q
q_ZoRo_p
10-11-2016, 09:55 AM #4

Firefoxx04:
It's likely, but the graphics won't look great. Dayz demands significant CPU power. Even with 4GB of RAM, using 8+ GB is common during play (I have 24 total). The best clock speed matters. Adjust graphics settings to normal or high, never low. Low forces the CPU to handle graphics, which ruins performance. The 750ti has enough GPU power for high settings on a fast CPU. If I had an Intel core i5 4460, would it work well?

S
Sindyion
Member
203
10-11-2016, 03:20 PM
#5
Yes, it helps the GPU perform at its best.
I own a G3258, and they are really challenging.
Overclockers, if you're lucky, can hit 4.5GHz while keeping temperatures safe from the stock heat sink.
Around 4.3GHz should be sufficient to fully utilize the 750ti.
S
Sindyion
10-11-2016, 03:20 PM #5

Yes, it helps the GPU perform at its best.
I own a G3258, and they are really challenging.
Overclockers, if you're lucky, can hit 4.5GHz while keeping temperatures safe from the stock heat sink.
Around 4.3GHz should be sufficient to fully utilize the 750ti.