Get assistance with Windows scaling features.
Get assistance with Windows scaling features.
You’re experiencing a common issue with scaling settings. To adjust this, you can change the scaling percentage for each display individually in your settings. For Windows 8, go to Display settings → Scaling → Choose a percentage (e.g., 150% on 4K and 100% on 1080p) and ensure window drag works as expected. This should let you enjoy the 4K resolution while keeping text readable.
For this feature you need Windows 10. Windows 8.1 offers it, but you lack full authority (no registry tweak or secret setting—you rely entirely on the operating system), and support is questionable when it functions. Windows 10 provides total control and brings significant enhancements to Display Scaling. I assure you, you’ll need all available assistance, since most Windows applications still struggle with high-DPI displays, even though they’re becoming more common on laptops, including gaming ones. The reason remains rooted in the past: high resolution on small screens was unthinkable back then, and when Microsoft introduced Display Scaling with Windows XP, it wasn’t widely understood by developers or users, especially without a market-ready display. It wasn’t until Windows 7 (and later) that the concept gained traction. Sadly, the GUI framework still needs major updates to handle high-DPI scaling properly—it wasn’t built for this, and per-monitor adjustments are another challenge. Many software providers treat support for it as an afterthought, often sidelining it. Notably, Steam doesn’t offer Display Scaling support at all (likely because Valve isn’t motivated by competition). The positive side is that compatible applications are slowly increasing in number. Under Windows 10, you can enable compatibility modes to let the OS suggest scaling strategies, though results vary. (FileZilla is actually high-DPI aware; I chose it based on proximity of my mouse.) Congratulations on your new monitor! And happy birthday!
You might not be able to adjust scaling settings through the Nvidia control panel.