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Screen tearing in CS:GO

Screen tearing in CS:GO

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ggkn00b
Junior Member
12
10-28-2016, 07:26 PM
#1
Hey there! In CS:GO you're experiencing screen tearing despite a solid rig. Since your setup runs at 60Hz and you're using a non-Freesync panel, the issue might be related to frame rate limits. You mentioned trying FPS_max 61 but it worsened the problem—maybe adjusting other settings or checking for GPU bottlenecks could help. Stutters are definitely more annoying than tearing, so focus on stabilizing the frame rate and ensuring your hardware can handle the load. Let me know if you want more tips!
G
ggkn00b
10-28-2016, 07:26 PM #1

Hey there! In CS:GO you're experiencing screen tearing despite a solid rig. Since your setup runs at 60Hz and you're using a non-Freesync panel, the issue might be related to frame rate limits. You mentioned trying FPS_max 61 but it worsened the problem—maybe adjusting other settings or checking for GPU bottlenecks could help. Stutters are definitely more annoying than tearing, so focus on stabilizing the frame rate and ensuring your hardware can handle the load. Let me know if you want more tips!

M
maxmat345
Member
65
11-02-2016, 03:20 PM
#2
I play CS:GO at 300fps on my BenQ screen without any free sync, G-Sync, or VSync issues, and I haven’t seen any tearing. Perhaps enabling triple buffer might improve the experience.
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maxmat345
11-02-2016, 03:20 PM #2

I play CS:GO at 300fps on my BenQ screen without any free sync, G-Sync, or VSync issues, and I haven’t seen any tearing. Perhaps enabling triple buffer might improve the experience.

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alone_me
Member
180
11-03-2016, 06:56 AM
#3
Ensuring your FPS stays at 60fps helps prevent stutter when using V-Sync. If it drops, adaptive V-Sync adjusts accordingly, though manually enabling V-Sync or adaptive V-Sync can reduce lag. Using triple buffering in your settings and keeping the GPU busy with rendering minimizes tearing while allowing smoother performance. Higher FPS generally reduces visible tearing, making it less noticeable even if some delay remains.
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alone_me
11-03-2016, 06:56 AM #3

Ensuring your FPS stays at 60fps helps prevent stutter when using V-Sync. If it drops, adaptive V-Sync adjusts accordingly, though manually enabling V-Sync or adaptive V-Sync can reduce lag. Using triple buffering in your settings and keeping the GPU busy with rendering minimizes tearing while allowing smoother performance. Higher FPS generally reduces visible tearing, making it less noticeable even if some delay remains.

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csige791
Posting Freak
818
11-24-2016, 02:24 PM
#4
Great! I'm ready to try.
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csige791
11-24-2016, 02:24 PM #4

Great! I'm ready to try.

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Ormvakt
Member
58
11-24-2016, 10:33 PM
#5
Activating V-sync produces stunning visuals yet introduces significant delay. I refer to it as sliding since aiming or moving your weapon results in misalignment or inaccuracy. I believe triple buffering could be the solution.
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Ormvakt
11-24-2016, 10:33 PM #5

Activating V-sync produces stunning visuals yet introduces significant delay. I refer to it as sliding since aiming or moving your weapon results in misalignment or inaccuracy. I believe triple buffering could be the solution.

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JacobLouis30
Posting Freak
856
11-25-2016, 02:12 AM
#6
It seems your screen is probably the issue. I used a 60Hz IPS display and experienced frequent tears. Switching to a 144Hz monitor resolved the problem completely. For CSGO, I highly suggest using a 144Hz panel. I've tried various fixes like lowering FPS or enabling vSync, but they didn't fully eliminate the tearing—vSync helped a bit but added input lag.
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JacobLouis30
11-25-2016, 02:12 AM #6

It seems your screen is probably the issue. I used a 60Hz IPS display and experienced frequent tears. Switching to a 144Hz monitor resolved the problem completely. For CSGO, I highly suggest using a 144Hz panel. I've tried various fixes like lowering FPS or enabling vSync, but they didn't fully eliminate the tearing—vSync helped a bit but added input lag.

R
155
11-26-2016, 04:41 AM
#7
I operate at 300 frames per second—almost imperceptible, only visible at the edges.
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ReisingerJocke
11-26-2016, 04:41 AM #7

I operate at 300 frames per second—almost imperceptible, only visible at the edges.

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_Jay21_
Member
63
11-30-2016, 07:19 AM
#8
The only option is to enable VSync.
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_Jay21_
11-30-2016, 07:19 AM #8

The only option is to enable VSync.