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Troubleshooting Low Frame Rates in Minecraft with Shaders

Troubleshooting Low Frame Rates in Minecraft with Shaders

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Doctor_Pi
Member
214
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM
#1
After upgrading my equipment, I’ve recently resumed playing Minecraft with friends on a server. My frame rate typically ranges from 100 to 200 frames per second without shader effects; however, when shaders are activated, it drops dramatically, fluctuating between 30 and 80 FPS. I’ve tried numerous troubleshooting steps over the past week, including installing OptiFine, reinstalling Java, adjusting RAM allocation (from 2GB to 8GB), modifying render distance, experimenting with V-Sync and frame limits, disabling suspected performance-impairing AMD applications, disconnecting Discord for dedicated graphics processing, and testing all shader configuration combinations. I’ve extensively researched this problem online without finding a solution.

My system specifications are as follows:
Operating System: Windows 10 Home
Processor: Ryzen 5 2600 @3.4GHz
Graphics Card: Radeon RX 580 4GB (Core Clock: 1350 MHz, Memory Clock: 1750 MHz)
Memory: 16GB DDR4 2666MHz
Storage: WD 500GB HDD, Toshiba 750GB HDD

I play alongside a teammate who possesses an R5 2600x and a GTX 970, easily maintaining over 100 FPS with shaders enabled. It’s incredibly disheartening to invest in a system only for it to perform poorly; I expected better results. Any assistance or guidance would be greatly valued. Thank you!

I've primarily experienced low frame rates specifically within Minecraft during these issues.
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Doctor_Pi
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM #1

After upgrading my equipment, I’ve recently resumed playing Minecraft with friends on a server. My frame rate typically ranges from 100 to 200 frames per second without shader effects; however, when shaders are activated, it drops dramatically, fluctuating between 30 and 80 FPS. I’ve tried numerous troubleshooting steps over the past week, including installing OptiFine, reinstalling Java, adjusting RAM allocation (from 2GB to 8GB), modifying render distance, experimenting with V-Sync and frame limits, disabling suspected performance-impairing AMD applications, disconnecting Discord for dedicated graphics processing, and testing all shader configuration combinations. I’ve extensively researched this problem online without finding a solution.

My system specifications are as follows:
Operating System: Windows 10 Home
Processor: Ryzen 5 2600 @3.4GHz
Graphics Card: Radeon RX 580 4GB (Core Clock: 1350 MHz, Memory Clock: 1750 MHz)
Memory: 16GB DDR4 2666MHz
Storage: WD 500GB HDD, Toshiba 750GB HDD

I play alongside a teammate who possesses an R5 2600x and a GTX 970, easily maintaining over 100 FPS with shaders enabled. It’s incredibly disheartening to invest in a system only for it to perform poorly; I expected better results. Any assistance or guidance would be greatly valued. Thank you!

I've primarily experienced low frame rates specifically within Minecraft during these issues.

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Dododaan12345
Junior Member
40
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM
#2
Attempting to remove and reinstall the game might help, as shaders significantly affect performance – this could simply be standard impact. Consider this: Every block within your visible render distance, including those hidden beneath the ground, needs to be redrawn using the shader.
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Dododaan12345
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM #2

Attempting to remove and reinstall the game might help, as shaders significantly affect performance – this could simply be standard impact. Consider this: Every block within your visible render distance, including those hidden beneath the ground, needs to be redrawn using the shader.

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keah01
Junior Member
44
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM
#3
The results you observe are influenced by the shader pack implemented. Did you install it via OptiFine? You shouldn’t anticipate optimal performance with heavily modified packs, as they frequently lack efficiency.

Honestly, I would anticipate higher frame rates than 100fps while playing standard Minecraft. You mentioned your gameplay occurs on servers; your experience may fluctuate considerably depending on the server type—particularly if it's a minigame environment. Have you attempted to test stability by playing on a realm or a singleplayer world?

It’s a speculative observation, but most shaders appear to function more effectively with NVIDIA graphics cards. Consider exploring lighter shader packs if you haven’t already done so.
K
keah01
03-14-2025, 10:30 AM #3

The results you observe are influenced by the shader pack implemented. Did you install it via OptiFine? You shouldn’t anticipate optimal performance with heavily modified packs, as they frequently lack efficiency.

Honestly, I would anticipate higher frame rates than 100fps while playing standard Minecraft. You mentioned your gameplay occurs on servers; your experience may fluctuate considerably depending on the server type—particularly if it's a minigame environment. Have you attempted to test stability by playing on a realm or a singleplayer world?

It’s a speculative observation, but most shaders appear to function more effectively with NVIDIA graphics cards. Consider exploring lighter shader packs if you haven’t already done so.