F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Premium computer performance appears underwhelming.

Premium computer performance appears underwhelming.

Premium computer performance appears underwhelming.

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Mineplexer215
Junior Member
2
02-02-2018, 05:55 PM
#1
Okay so after 2 months of asking on forums and searching on google and trying to fix it myself, i have given up. My specs are 2080 ti, i9 9900ks, 64gb ddr4 ram, NVme 2tb ssd, asus rog strix z390-e gaming motherboard. and none of my games run like you would expect a beast pc like this to run, csgo runs at 100- 190 fps with stutters and just feels wierd, while my friends with 1070's run it at 300+ fps no problem, and rust, escape from tarkov, cod modern warfare, arma, black ops4, watch dogs 2, etc just run really really dissapointing, rust runs at a 70 - 100fps with stutters and certainly doesnt feel smooth, escape from tarkov is just laggy and stuttering, and just feels like absolut dog
<Mod Edit>
, modern warfare has input lag and is just wierd. and so on, and idk what to do at this point, ive tried changing bios settings, changing ram mhz, downgrading windows, updating windows, reinstalling windows, used different ingame settings, used g-sync, changing monitor settings, and so on, i am so god damn insanely sad and annoyed at the same time right now, i just simply dont know anymore, a pc like this should just work and i feel like i have wasted so much damn money on something a damn 1070 could beat easily.. Any help would be VERY VERY VERY appreciated. temps are fine so thats not it either. im on a 144hz monitor. Please no ''you tried restarting your pc?'' , ''have you tried lowering your settings?'' comments.. sorry if i sound rude but i am just very annoyed. Its been 2 months of just trying and asking for help, ive just recently contacted the place i bought my pc from and im awaiting a responds from them. Is this normal? am i expecting too much? I remember playing the VR game called boneworks the day it came out, and i was very dissapointed in the perfomance. A guy LITERALLY RAN THE GAME ON A F*CKING MACBOOK AND RAN THE GAME BETTER THAN ME..
M
Mineplexer215
02-02-2018, 05:55 PM #1

Okay so after 2 months of asking on forums and searching on google and trying to fix it myself, i have given up. My specs are 2080 ti, i9 9900ks, 64gb ddr4 ram, NVme 2tb ssd, asus rog strix z390-e gaming motherboard. and none of my games run like you would expect a beast pc like this to run, csgo runs at 100- 190 fps with stutters and just feels wierd, while my friends with 1070's run it at 300+ fps no problem, and rust, escape from tarkov, cod modern warfare, arma, black ops4, watch dogs 2, etc just run really really dissapointing, rust runs at a 70 - 100fps with stutters and certainly doesnt feel smooth, escape from tarkov is just laggy and stuttering, and just feels like absolut dog
<Mod Edit>
, modern warfare has input lag and is just wierd. and so on, and idk what to do at this point, ive tried changing bios settings, changing ram mhz, downgrading windows, updating windows, reinstalling windows, used different ingame settings, used g-sync, changing monitor settings, and so on, i am so god damn insanely sad and annoyed at the same time right now, i just simply dont know anymore, a pc like this should just work and i feel like i have wasted so much damn money on something a damn 1070 could beat easily.. Any help would be VERY VERY VERY appreciated. temps are fine so thats not it either. im on a 144hz monitor. Please no ''you tried restarting your pc?'' , ''have you tried lowering your settings?'' comments.. sorry if i sound rude but i am just very annoyed. Its been 2 months of just trying and asking for help, ive just recently contacted the place i bought my pc from and im awaiting a responds from them. Is this normal? am i expecting too much? I remember playing the VR game called boneworks the day it came out, and i was very dissapointed in the perfomance. A guy LITERALLY RAN THE GAME ON A F*CKING MACBOOK AND RAN THE GAME BETTER THAN ME..

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goji_ron
Junior Member
19
02-03-2018, 02:32 PM
#2
Well, this may not be the issue but its something I learned once that helped me understand a lot more about how fps is transferred to monitors.
When you run...
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goji_ron
02-03-2018, 02:32 PM #2

Well, this may not be the issue but its something I learned once that helped me understand a lot more about how fps is transferred to monitors.
When you run...

R
Rayack
Senior Member
539
02-03-2018, 05:35 PM
#3
Let's start with your full system specs in this format:
MOTHERBOARD:
CPU:
GPU:
RAM:
PSU:
HDD/SSD:
MONITOR:
CASE:
OS:
Go to this website -
https://www.userbenchmark.com/
Click on free download and run the benchmark. Paste the link of your results here.
What are your temperatures at IDLE and LOAD for your CPU and GPU?
At what resolution are you playing your games? Is your friend with a 1070 playing at the same resolution as you? If you're playing in 1440p and he is playing in 1080p expect a difference.
R
Rayack
02-03-2018, 05:35 PM #3

Let's start with your full system specs in this format:
MOTHERBOARD:
CPU:
GPU:
RAM:
PSU:
HDD/SSD:
MONITOR:
CASE:
OS:
Go to this website -
https://www.userbenchmark.com/
Click on free download and run the benchmark. Paste the link of your results here.
What are your temperatures at IDLE and LOAD for your CPU and GPU?
At what resolution are you playing your games? Is your friend with a 1070 playing at the same resolution as you? If you're playing in 1440p and he is playing in 1080p expect a difference.

W
WorkOff
Member
145
02-04-2018, 06:57 PM
#4
Please perform a diagnostic evaluation.

Launch MSI Afterburner – the hardware monitoring panel, and play your game until stuttering occurs; then provide a screenshot (uploaded to imgur.com with a shared link).

The screenshot should display relevant charts—frames per second, CPU utilization and temperature, GPU utilization and temperature, memory usage, RAM usage, and pagefile usage.

Here’s an example of the MSI Afterburner hardware monitoring window:
W
WorkOff
02-04-2018, 06:57 PM #4

Please perform a diagnostic evaluation.

Launch MSI Afterburner – the hardware monitoring panel, and play your game until stuttering occurs; then provide a screenshot (uploaded to imgur.com with a shared link).

The screenshot should display relevant charts—frames per second, CPU utilization and temperature, GPU utilization and temperature, memory usage, RAM usage, and pagefile usage.

Here’s an example of the MSI Afterburner hardware monitoring window:

E
EntriosYT
Junior Member
41
02-06-2018, 04:23 PM
#5
I'm currently calling, and I will complete this task upon waking up the next day.
E
EntriosYT
02-06-2018, 04:23 PM #5

I'm currently calling, and I will complete this task upon waking up the next day.

D
Dephunkpunk_2
Senior Member
484
02-10-2018, 04:26 AM
#6
Thank you all.
D
Dephunkpunk_2
02-10-2018, 04:26 AM #6

Thank you all.

D
Drako54321
Member
51
02-11-2018, 01:02 AM
#7
My PC specifications are as follows: Asus ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming motherboard, Intel Core i9-9900KS (4.0 GHz) CPU, Asus ROG Strix RTX 2080 Ti GPU, 64GB Vengeance DDR4 RAM, Corsair HX Platinum power supply (estimated), a 2TB Samsung EVO NVMe SSD, an AOC 144Hz monitor, InWin 805 Infinity case, and Windows 10 Pro 64-bit OS. My CPU and GPU load are currently unknown, with in-game temperatures averaging between 34-40°C while gaming at a 1440p resolution; my friends primarily play on 1080p displays.
D
Drako54321
02-11-2018, 01:02 AM #7

My PC specifications are as follows: Asus ROG Strix Z390-E Gaming motherboard, Intel Core i9-9900KS (4.0 GHz) CPU, Asus ROG Strix RTX 2080 Ti GPU, 64GB Vengeance DDR4 RAM, Corsair HX Platinum power supply (estimated), a 2TB Samsung EVO NVMe SSD, an AOC 144Hz monitor, InWin 805 Infinity case, and Windows 10 Pro 64-bit OS. My CPU and GPU load are currently unknown, with in-game temperatures averaging between 34-40°C while gaming at a 1440p resolution; my friends primarily play on 1080p displays.

B
budginglime6
Member
122
02-12-2018, 10:41 AM
#8
The benchmark outcomes shown here are: https://prnt.sc/qmk314 and https://prnt.sc/qmk34e.
B
budginglime6
02-12-2018, 10:41 AM #8

The benchmark outcomes shown here are: https://prnt.sc/qmk314 and https://prnt.sc/qmk34e.

N
Nessa106
Member
169
02-13-2018, 02:07 PM
#9
Here’s a revised version of the text:

This might not be the core problem, but I once discovered something that significantly improved my comprehension of how frame rates are delivered to displays. Increasing frame rates beyond your monitor's refresh rate can indeed minimize frametimes and other desirable gaming effects. However, it often leads to stuttering as the display attempts to output frames faster than it’s capable of producing, even when restricted by its inherent refresh rate. A doubling of your monitor’s Hz is a common practice; however, with a 144Hz screen, exceeding 2x your frame rate isn't always ideal due to hardware and monitor limitations – typically not supporting inputs above 300fps. This issue becomes more pronounced at higher frame rates.

For instance, I have a 75Hz monitor while playing Apex Legends with an average frame rate of approximately 170fps. It appears as though I'm experiencing a 60fps game because, first, I didn’t purchase the optimal 75Hz display, and second, 170fps is substantially greater than twice my monitor's refresh rate.

Alternatively, there’s the phenomenon of micro-tearing. Surprisingly, running at 74Hz or even 75Hz on a 75Hz monitor results in extremely noticeable screen tearing. Yet, as frame rates increase, this tearing diminishes and becomes less apparent. However, it can still produce that stuttering visual effect, causing the game to *appear* to be struggling due to the display, when the problem originates with the monitor itself rather than the hardware.
N
Nessa106
02-13-2018, 02:07 PM #9

Here’s a revised version of the text:

This might not be the core problem, but I once discovered something that significantly improved my comprehension of how frame rates are delivered to displays. Increasing frame rates beyond your monitor's refresh rate can indeed minimize frametimes and other desirable gaming effects. However, it often leads to stuttering as the display attempts to output frames faster than it’s capable of producing, even when restricted by its inherent refresh rate. A doubling of your monitor’s Hz is a common practice; however, with a 144Hz screen, exceeding 2x your frame rate isn't always ideal due to hardware and monitor limitations – typically not supporting inputs above 300fps. This issue becomes more pronounced at higher frame rates.

For instance, I have a 75Hz monitor while playing Apex Legends with an average frame rate of approximately 170fps. It appears as though I'm experiencing a 60fps game because, first, I didn’t purchase the optimal 75Hz display, and second, 170fps is substantially greater than twice my monitor's refresh rate.

Alternatively, there’s the phenomenon of micro-tearing. Surprisingly, running at 74Hz or even 75Hz on a 75Hz monitor results in extremely noticeable screen tearing. Yet, as frame rates increase, this tearing diminishes and becomes less apparent. However, it can still produce that stuttering visual effect, causing the game to *appear* to be struggling due to the display, when the problem originates with the monitor itself rather than the hardware.

J
jomayB
Junior Member
15
02-27-2018, 01:39 AM
#10
Thank you very much! I’ll attempt to reduce my frame rate to match my display and observe if that improves things.
J
jomayB
02-27-2018, 01:39 AM #10

Thank you very much! I’ll attempt to reduce my frame rate to match my display and observe if that improves things.

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