F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Performance is significantly lower than anticipated.

Performance is significantly lower than anticipated.

Performance is significantly lower than anticipated.

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loveteam
Junior Member
5
03-02-2016, 06:24 PM
#1
Hey there, I just got Battlefield V for the first time after checking some YouTube benchmarks. My GPU handled it smoothly at 60fps with medium-high settings. In multiplayer, it drops to around 20-40 FPS even on low graphics. The task manager shows only 30-50% CPU usage and similar stats. I tried overclocking the GPU but didn’t notice much change. Temperatures stayed around 60°C for both CPU and GPU. The challenge is figuring out how to run it well despite having identical hardware to those videos. My specs are: GTX 1650, 4GB RAM, i5-9300H, 16GB DDR4.
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loveteam
03-02-2016, 06:24 PM #1

Hey there, I just got Battlefield V for the first time after checking some YouTube benchmarks. My GPU handled it smoothly at 60fps with medium-high settings. In multiplayer, it drops to around 20-40 FPS even on low graphics. The task manager shows only 30-50% CPU usage and similar stats. I tried overclocking the GPU but didn’t notice much change. Temperatures stayed around 60°C for both CPU and GPU. The challenge is figuring out how to run it well despite having identical hardware to those videos. My specs are: GTX 1650, 4GB RAM, i5-9300H, 16GB DDR4.

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iHarleyQuinn_
Member
79
03-10-2016, 03:19 PM
#2
Which processor are the videos utilizing? Is your display matching that resolution?
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iHarleyQuinn_
03-10-2016, 03:19 PM #2

Which processor are the videos utilizing? Is your display matching that resolution?

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Luigi
Junior Member
19
03-10-2016, 09:43 PM
#3
Identical to all components—CPU, GPU, RAM, and resolution. Here’s an example from YouTube.
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Luigi
03-10-2016, 09:43 PM #3

Identical to all components—CPU, GPU, RAM, and resolution. Here’s an example from YouTube.

Z
Zheton
Junior Member
39
03-18-2016, 09:24 AM
#4
The video looks suspicious—it’s a lengthy 22-minute file, which might be unusual. I’m ready to assist you with this.
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Zheton
03-18-2016, 09:24 AM #4

The video looks suspicious—it’s a lengthy 22-minute file, which might be unusual. I’m ready to assist you with this.

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cmart592
Member
203
03-18-2016, 12:55 PM
#5
I refreshed the NVIDIA driver and applied the best configurations, but the performance remains far from 60 even at medium settings. The video plays in ultra 1080p.
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cmart592
03-18-2016, 12:55 PM #5

I refreshed the NVIDIA driver and applied the best configurations, but the performance remains far from 60 even at medium settings. The video plays in ultra 1080p.

K
KarmenPlays
Member
72
03-19-2016, 05:42 AM
#6
It could relate to RAM speed. This might be useful to explore given the recent videos discussing slow laptop performance.
K
KarmenPlays
03-19-2016, 05:42 AM #6

It could relate to RAM speed. This might be useful to explore given the recent videos discussing slow laptop performance.

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CLPSGAMER
Member
176
03-19-2016, 08:35 AM
#7
Your PC specs are: Intel i5-9300H processor running at 2.40GHz, with 2400MHz RAM—similar to the 2400MHz frequency mentioned in the video.
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CLPSGAMER
03-19-2016, 08:35 AM #7

Your PC specs are: Intel i5-9300H processor running at 2.40GHz, with 2400MHz RAM—similar to the 2400MHz frequency mentioned in the video.

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Robang592
Senior Member
368
03-20-2016, 01:10 AM
#8
It looks like you're aiming for around 50 frames per second. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 is suitable for laptops. Check if your system hits any power constraints—adjusting performance settings in Windows and enabling high driver performance can help.
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Robang592
03-20-2016, 01:10 AM #8

It looks like you're aiming for around 50 frames per second. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 is suitable for laptops. Check if your system hits any power constraints—adjusting performance settings in Windows and enabling high driver performance can help.

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Trixie3474
Junior Member
46
03-21-2016, 05:22 PM
#9
I noticed your request, but there seems to be some confusion. The power settings you're referring to are likely related to your computer's hardware or BIOS, not directly to the gaming performance you mentioned. To check those, you can look in the BIOS/UEFI settings or the system control panel for power management options specific to your Lenovo L340. If you need further help, let me know!
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Trixie3474
03-21-2016, 05:22 PM #9

I noticed your request, but there seems to be some confusion. The power settings you're referring to are likely related to your computer's hardware or BIOS, not directly to the gaming performance you mentioned. To check those, you can look in the BIOS/UEFI settings or the system control panel for power management options specific to your Lenovo L340. If you need further help, let me know!

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DantehIsGay
Posting Freak
902
03-21-2016, 06:39 PM
#10
Hmm, interesting fact. Your laptop is actually one of the models used for average scores on Notebookcheck's 1650 page. Make sure you're connected properly and using a suitable charger while gaming. You can open the Nvidia control panel by right-clicking on your desktop or searching in programs. If it doesn't appear, consider updating your GPU drivers—try downloading them directly from NVIDIA's site. For performance checks, use HWinfo and RTSS tools to monitor CPU/GPU stats during gameplay. Look for any throttling warnings in the HWinfo panel. If you hit a limit, it might be the CPU (shows "Package/RingPower Limit Exceeded") or GPU (shows "Performance Limit-Power"). At full power, the 1650 should draw around 50W. If not, adjust Lenovo's drivers or BIOS settings. Also, verify your BIOS version and consider updating it if needed.
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DantehIsGay
03-21-2016, 06:39 PM #10

Hmm, interesting fact. Your laptop is actually one of the models used for average scores on Notebookcheck's 1650 page. Make sure you're connected properly and using a suitable charger while gaming. You can open the Nvidia control panel by right-clicking on your desktop or searching in programs. If it doesn't appear, consider updating your GPU drivers—try downloading them directly from NVIDIA's site. For performance checks, use HWinfo and RTSS tools to monitor CPU/GPU stats during gameplay. Look for any throttling warnings in the HWinfo panel. If you hit a limit, it might be the CPU (shows "Package/RingPower Limit Exceeded") or GPU (shows "Performance Limit-Power"). At full power, the 1650 should draw around 50W. If not, adjust Lenovo's drivers or BIOS settings. Also, verify your BIOS version and consider updating it if needed.

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