F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Players experience issues with game performance due to anti-aliasing settings.

Players experience issues with game performance due to anti-aliasing settings.

Players experience issues with game performance due to anti-aliasing settings.

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SrUrsoo
Member
171
01-30-2016, 08:28 PM
#1
You're encountering a black screen of death in Tekken 7 with anti-aliasing enabled. Turning it off resolves the issue, while other games like Genshin Impact function normally. Your system specs are: AMD A8-6600K CPU, MSI GTX 760 GPU, 2GB RAM, and Kingston HyperX 1*8GB. Only these two games cause the problem despite being graphic-heavy. An old forum suggested a fix, but you're curious about the underlying cause.
S
SrUrsoo
01-30-2016, 08:28 PM #1

You're encountering a black screen of death in Tekken 7 with anti-aliasing enabled. Turning it off resolves the issue, while other games like Genshin Impact function normally. Your system specs are: AMD A8-6600K CPU, MSI GTX 760 GPU, 2GB RAM, and Kingston HyperX 1*8GB. Only these two games cause the problem despite being graphic-heavy. An old forum suggested a fix, but you're curious about the underlying cause.

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dk222
Junior Member
26
01-31-2016, 10:55 PM
#2
It seems like your VRAM might be running low. While 2 GB isn't huge these days, it could be the issue. A small memory overclock might resolve the problem.
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dk222
01-31-2016, 10:55 PM #2

It seems like your VRAM might be running low. While 2 GB isn't huge these days, it could be the issue. A small memory overclock might resolve the problem.

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XxUndynexX
Junior Member
12
02-01-2016, 12:55 AM
#3
It seems the VRAM might be defective, and there aren't many options left. Things are likely to worsen over time, though it could stabilize if you're fortunate. I'm not certain about the exact issue, but it probably points to a memory problem, which might be resolved by lowering the clock speed. The 2GB is limited, but the other system used a 1080Ti model, suggesting memory-related concerns.
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XxUndynexX
02-01-2016, 12:55 AM #3

It seems the VRAM might be defective, and there aren't many options left. Things are likely to worsen over time, though it could stabilize if you're fortunate. I'm not certain about the exact issue, but it probably points to a memory problem, which might be resolved by lowering the clock speed. The 2GB is limited, but the other system used a 1080Ti model, suggesting memory-related concerns.