Game Settings
Game Settings
The optimal approach depends on your goals. Using GeForce Experience can help, but it may reduce quality in certain areas. You might find better results by letting the game auto-optimize based on your hardware or by experimenting manually to discover your ideal settings. Neither method is strictly superior—it comes down to what feels best for your experience.
I generally adjust the GeForce Experience settings based on what NVIDIA suggests. I aim for around 60 FPS or higher consistently. For a 760 GPU, I’d likely begin with medium options for most recent titles and disable anti-aliasing or opt for a lower MSAA/FXAA setting, though some prefer no AA over FXAA.
Start with AA at 2X, then push everything to its limit. Once that's done, reduce the components that most affect your card's performance—like using a 2GB VRAM card in GTA 5 with ultra textures won't maintain a stable frame rate. If your VRAM is sufficient, you might begin by adjusting shadows according to your taste.
I keep all GIMP settings active since they enhance more than just image clarity—they bring out better visuals, realistic destruction, smooth water effects, and impressive hair simulations. I really enjoy physics-based simulations in games, which is why I’m excited about FLEX being integrated into real experiences. I’d rather play with lower texture/model details but with fun, eye-catching physics instead.
I begin with the Geforce experience available to me, then I disable outdated options such as motion blur and depth of field. Next, I monitor my FPS; if it exceeds 100, I tweak settings until it stabilizes around 80-90. If the score drops below 80, I switch to simpler AA effects and replace advanced shadows.