F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming What frame rate should I aim for in Battlefield V with this hardware setup?

What frame rate should I aim for in Battlefield V with this hardware setup?

What frame rate should I aim for in Battlefield V with this hardware setup?

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BlooPancake
Junior Member
48
06-16-2016, 11:32 AM
#1
MSI GE72MVR7RG-008 computer.
What frame rates can I expect at the minimum and maximum graphics settings?
Intel Core i7-7700HQ processor
Nvidia GTX 1070 graphics card
16GB of memory
256GB solid state drive
1 terabyte hard disk drive
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BlooPancake
06-16-2016, 11:32 AM #1

MSI GE72MVR7RG-008 computer.
What frame rates can I expect at the minimum and maximum graphics settings?
Intel Core i7-7700HQ processor
Nvidia GTX 1070 graphics card
16GB of memory
256GB solid state drive
1 terabyte hard disk drive

I
Ion23
Member
170
06-17-2016, 05:16 AM
#2
Performance varies based on display resolution and processing speed. With a 1080p setup, an estimated frame rate of 60-80 is typical. For 1440p, aiming for 60 frames per second is desirable. This graphics card was designed primarily for 1440p resolution but it’s three years old. My older 1060 struggles to maintain a consistent 1080p frame rate lately, so reduced FPS, particularly in newer titles, is likely. Experiment with adjusting graphical options like post-processing effects, ambient occlusion, and shadow detail – these tend to have the most significant impact on performance while offering minimal visual improvements. Additionally, limit anisotropic filtering to 4x. Verify that there isn’t a fixed frame rate enabled, and if one exists, disable it. If you have adequate cooling, consider overclocking your processor, as Battlefield has historically been demanding on the CPU in multiplayer scenarios. This information should be beneficial.
I
Ion23
06-17-2016, 05:16 AM #2

Performance varies based on display resolution and processing speed. With a 1080p setup, an estimated frame rate of 60-80 is typical. For 1440p, aiming for 60 frames per second is desirable. This graphics card was designed primarily for 1440p resolution but it’s three years old. My older 1060 struggles to maintain a consistent 1080p frame rate lately, so reduced FPS, particularly in newer titles, is likely. Experiment with adjusting graphical options like post-processing effects, ambient occlusion, and shadow detail – these tend to have the most significant impact on performance while offering minimal visual improvements. Additionally, limit anisotropic filtering to 4x. Verify that there isn’t a fixed frame rate enabled, and if one exists, disable it. If you have adequate cooling, consider overclocking your processor, as Battlefield has historically been demanding on the CPU in multiplayer scenarios. This information should be beneficial.

S
Sunahh
Posting Freak
863
06-18-2016, 10:52 AM
#3
FHD resolution.
base clock 2800 MHz / boost clock 3800 MHz
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Sunahh
06-18-2016, 10:52 AM #3

FHD resolution.
base clock 2800 MHz / boost clock 3800 MHz

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Jayrome
Member
61
06-20-2016, 02:33 AM
#4
That sounds like memory clocks. My 1080 ti barely makes it to 1900mhz boost on the gpu, but it sounds like your card factory boosts and I wouldn’t push it past that. What FPS are you getting?
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Jayrome
06-20-2016, 02:33 AM #4

That sounds like memory clocks. My 1080 ti barely makes it to 1900mhz boost on the gpu, but it sounds like your card factory boosts and I wouldn’t push it past that. What FPS are you getting?

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jeanelian1
Member
61
06-21-2016, 05:59 PM
#5
Ohh I wrote CPU speeds.
GPU base : 1443 / boost 1645 max is 1860.
I have 30-50 FPS on the medium preset in conquest.
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jeanelian1
06-21-2016, 05:59 PM #5

Ohh I wrote CPU speeds.
GPU base : 1443 / boost 1645 max is 1860.
I have 30-50 FPS on the medium preset in conquest.