F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming GTA 5 and dirt rally 2.0 are experiencing significant performance issues.

GTA 5 and dirt rally 2.0 are experiencing significant performance issues.

GTA 5 and dirt rally 2.0 are experiencing significant performance issues.

M
Marke_mus
Junior Member
24
10-06-2019, 03:52 PM
#1
Hi guys,
I’m facing a major problem with two games: dirt rally 2.0 and GTA 5, especially regarding frame rates. GTA 5 is consistently around 1 to 2 FPS, while dirt rally only reaches about 15 FPS at its peak. This is unusual compared to other games that run smoothly.
I also play Resident Evil 2 at over 60 FPS on full settings, Forza Horizon 4 hits around 110 FPS max, and Halo: Master Chief achieves over 90 FPS. However, GTA and dirt rally aren’t performing as expected.
My system specs are: AMD Ryzen 5 2600, NVIDIA RTX 2060 (Gigabyte), 16 GB RAM at 3200 MHz, B450F motherboard from ASUS, and both a solid state drive and hard disk installed.
I’ve tried updating drivers, adjusting every setting I can, reverting the GPU to its stock clock, and reinstalling the games, but nothing has changed.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.
M
Marke_mus
10-06-2019, 03:52 PM #1

Hi guys,
I’m facing a major problem with two games: dirt rally 2.0 and GTA 5, especially regarding frame rates. GTA 5 is consistently around 1 to 2 FPS, while dirt rally only reaches about 15 FPS at its peak. This is unusual compared to other games that run smoothly.
I also play Resident Evil 2 at over 60 FPS on full settings, Forza Horizon 4 hits around 110 FPS max, and Halo: Master Chief achieves over 90 FPS. However, GTA and dirt rally aren’t performing as expected.
My system specs are: AMD Ryzen 5 2600, NVIDIA RTX 2060 (Gigabyte), 16 GB RAM at 3200 MHz, B450F motherboard from ASUS, and both a solid state drive and hard disk installed.
I’ve tried updating drivers, adjusting every setting I can, reverting the GPU to its stock clock, and reinstalling the games, but nothing has changed.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

G
Glaeith
Member
101
10-06-2019, 05:12 PM
#2
It appears to be a software issue. Which Windows version are you using? If you're still on 7, think about upgrading to 10. A fresh installation of Windows 10 is advised in either case.
G
Glaeith
10-06-2019, 05:12 PM #2

It appears to be a software issue. Which Windows version are you using? If you're still on 7, think about upgrading to 10. A fresh installation of Windows 10 is advised in either case.

F
FuzzyMug
Senior Member
476
10-22-2019, 12:54 AM
#3
It appears to be a software issue. Which Windows version are you using? If you're still on 7, think about upgrading to 10. A fresh installation of Windows 10 is advised in either case.
F
FuzzyMug
10-22-2019, 12:54 AM #3

It appears to be a software issue. Which Windows version are you using? If you're still on 7, think about upgrading to 10. A fresh installation of Windows 10 is advised in either case.

D
Da_Shui_Bi
Member
52
10-23-2019, 01:52 AM
#4
I'm using windows 10 and was hoping to skip a clean install, but it seems like the only choice now. Thanks for the advice.
D
Da_Shui_Bi
10-23-2019, 01:52 AM #4

I'm using windows 10 and was hoping to skip a clean install, but it seems like the only choice now. Thanks for the advice.