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NVIDIA Fast Sync: A Detailed Guide – [https://www.beebom.com/nvidia-fast-sync-guide/](https://www.beebom.com/nvidia-fast-sync-guide/)
I’m using a glorious model o with a sceptre 165hz 1ms response time monitor
What are the specs of this system? Are you using something like an SLI setup? Have you tried enabling/disabling different sync settings in your Nvidia control panel, like Fastsync, G-Sync Compatible, or triple-buffering?
And how are you detecting this input latency? Could it just be network latency or something?
Unable to locate G-Sync or Fast Sync within the NVIDIA Control Panel. Triple buffering is disabled, and network connectivity isn't the cause as this issue persists on a local LAN server. Equipped with an RTX 2080 Ti, i9-9900K processor, and 32GB DDR4 RAM.
NVIDIA Fast Sync is an alternative v-sync method selected by choosing “fast” under the v-sync setting, not on or off. It aims to improve performance but won’t reduce latency if v-sync is already disabled.
To enable NVIDIA Fast Sync on GeForce GTX Cards, wonder about eliminating screen tearing while maintaining low latency. The option appears if your monitor supports FreeSync, connected via DisplayPort, and FreeSync is enabled in the monitor's settings. However, its primary purpose is as a better-performing v-sync method, unlikely to improve performance over disabling it, primarily eliminating screen tearing when the frame rate is below the monitor’s maximum refresh rate.
A review of a mouse noted an additional 1-2ms of input latency at DPI settings of 2100 or above, though this may not be perceptible. Reducing the DPI setting to 2000 might resolve this.
Furthermore, disabling “improve pointer precision” in the mouse’s settings could improve accuracy, as most games should utilize raw input regardless.
Pointer precision was already off. My mouse's DPI is at 800, so that cannot be the issue. I simply reset my BIOS and, inexplicably, that resolved it. I have no idea why.