Playing Doom Eternal with Vsync typically improves frame rate, though it may affect responsiveness.
Playing Doom Eternal with Vsync typically improves frame rate, though it may affect responsiveness.
The setup shows inconsistent performance depending on the settings. When Vsync is off, the CPU runs at full capacity but averages only 25–40 FPS. Enabling Vsync raises the frame rate to 45–60 FPS. The system has a Ryzen 3 PRO 2200G with a GTX 1650 OC, 4GB RAM, and 2x8GB memory (2667Mhz, 15GB usable). Storage is an HDD, and everything except textures is running in UltraNightmare mode. The GPU uses 1GB of VRAM, which is allocated for the monitor.
No, you can use as little as 64MB of RAM for VRAM in the Vega 8 when paired with a Ryzen 3.
It's actually quite unusual XD, since I believe this is the sole game impacted by this strange vsync issue. I wondered if it might stem from an incorrect setup in NVIDIA's Control Panel, but what Mark mentioned also seems plausible—the Ryzen 3 2200G appears to be the main constraint here.