Dragon's Dogma 2

Dragon's Dogma 2

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RTX 3060 Ti only 30fps?|
Hi, why my graphic card is RTX 3060 Ti only 30fps?|
i watch the youtube is 50++fps
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Showing 16-30 of 37 comments
Gamefever Apr 5, 2024 @ 6:48pm 
HEY OP,
Did anyone tell you it was your CPU yet?
Denninja Apr 5, 2024 @ 6:52pm 
3060 (not even Ti) is overkill for this. Your CPU gets the data your GPU needs, it comes first. Because it's too slow, your newer GPU can only run this as fast as your old CPU.
Echorion Apr 5, 2024 @ 6:53pm 
Game runs like ass, but for some reason people be simping and praising the game anyways.

They dead ass released a broken game, told everyone it was broken before release, and still have done nothing.
Guldo Apr 5, 2024 @ 6:55pm 
Originally posted by xShapelessx:
Nah this is because you have a ♥♥♥♥ cpu. I run a

3060 ti
ryzen 7 7800 x3d
32 gb ddr 5 ram

It doesnt run perfect but I get like 70 fps in town on mostly high using 1440 dlss quality
Thats because turning on dlss solves some of the pathing issues on the cpu. I have a 7900x and am amd 7800xt and your cpu isnt much better than mine yet i get really bad fps like in the 40s.

FSR wont fix pathing but DLSS does. its not a complete fix but it causes the cpu to handle the pathing differently.
Last edited by Guldo; Apr 5, 2024 @ 6:56pm
Karnivool Apr 5, 2024 @ 7:04pm 
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
I been having issues here with crashing and once in a while complete shutoff.

AMD Ryzen 9 5950X
RTX 3090ti
64gb ram
whats your psu?. You are either tripping overcurrent protection or overheating. Cyberpunk prob isin't stressing your pc like this game does despite looking better.
Watermelon Knife Apr 5, 2024 @ 7:15pm 
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
Thing is I can play Cyberpunk 2077 on max settings and never have a issue

Game's by a different company released over three years ago and is Nvidia's posterboy for their raytracing tech on the 4000 series RTX cards, for both those companies it better not have any issues as it'll be a greater PR disaster for CDproject red and Nvidia. Not that the latter really cares anymore as they make most of their money from AI these days.

Dragon's Dogma 2 is none of those, if anything it'll become those Computer hardware youtubers benchmark tool!

A bit of digging around a few years ago, I stumbled upon a programming youtubers who says that in Japan, programming skills are not really valued there compared to the hardware side of things, as such they often have more issues with the programming side of things (according to this youtuber). I don't know how reliable that info is, but I have heard other people complaining about poor programming found in Japanese games most notably in their mobiles games,

My point being the performance of one game on anyone's system CAN NOT and should not be compared to another in general! Even if two games compared are from the same company, they could have had two very different development and QA teams involved with different standards.
Originally posted by Red Hefner:
3060Ti is last gen and mid

it is last two gen low
Extra411 Apr 5, 2024 @ 7:16pm 
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
any recommendations?

I would say that you could run a series of different tests each targeting CPU, GPU, and ram. It's also important to run them while having temperature/power monitors software active at the same time. Don't neglect ram/memory tests - in fact, start with them first, because in my experience they have a high chance of causing crashes. Usually CPU and GPU problems tend to manifest themselves as you use the computer for random tasks, but memory problems tend to be more hidden, especially if you have large quantities of ram since it's not often the problem sectors get loaded. Ram is one of those components which is least tested but with the highest chance of screwing up your system. Get memtest and run them.

As for which tests to run, different people will recommend different things.
For CPU, you can try things like cinebench, prime95, and even cpu-z has the ability to load your cpu for stress test.
GPU issues tend to show themselves the most often, because as you play games you'll inevitably run into them, as such they are also one of least likely culprits (if you have a GPU problem you'll likely crash in every game).
PSU problems are more difficult to identify, and you really have to kind of think your way through here. There are softwares like HWmonitor that can estimate your total system power draw, and you basically use that as a source of info to see if you can find any patterns with system crashing (such as, whether your PC crashes only when power draw is really high).

Updating motherboard bios is also a good idea (especially since you're having problems), just make sure you know how to do it and not brick the system.
Amauri14 Apr 5, 2024 @ 7:45pm 
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
Originally posted by Extra411:

Crashing is possible in towns; it appears to be some kind of issue with loading/streaming. However, since your system is also shutting down, that's a bad sign, and could have a number of causes. I recommend you run your system through a series of stress tests to find out exactly what it is. And just because cyberpunk runs fine for you doesn't mean your system is fine. Dragon's dogma 2 shouldn't cause your system to shut down, and I've never experienced it in 150 hours of playtime.
any recommendations?
What is the wattage of your power supply, and when was the last time you applied thermal paste to your CPU? Your PC shutting down can happen if you either trip your power supply or if your CPU reaches its thermal limit. Try doing some testing to see if it is the CPU is the one causing it by doing a benchmark in Cinebench. Last year I had that issue with my now-dead 2700X because the thermal paste that came with its heat sink ended up drying and fusing the heat sink and CPU. Oh, in case that's happening on your side, try applying some WD-40 to them to separate them, but hopefully that's not what's happening here, but we will not know until you test your machine.

Also, be sure to check that you don't have any auto overclock features enabled on your BIOS, some BIOS, like the one on my PC did after its last update, turn those options on by default which will leave your system unstable in unpredictable ways. For instance, my system was crashing for months while idle because of it, and then, it started crashing exclusively on games running on Unity.

Also, remember to check that your RAM is not overclocked too high, as that can also cause weird issues in both software and hardware.
Last edited by Amauri14; Apr 5, 2024 @ 9:47pm
codj Apr 5, 2024 @ 7:50pm 
3600 and 32gb same card usually about 60fps in open world ,look into getting the DLSS mod?
Originally posted by Amauri14:
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
any recommendations?
What is the wattage of your power supply, and when was the last time you applied thermal paste to your power supply? Your PC shutting down can happen if you either trip your power supply or if your CPU reaches its thermal limit. Try doing some testing to see if it is the CPU is the one causing it by doing a benchmark in Cinebench. Last year I had that issue with my now-dead 2700X because the thermal paste that came with its heat sink ended up drying and fusing the heat sink and CPU. Oh, in case that's happening on your side, try applying some WD-40 to them to separate them, but hopefully that's not what's happening here, but we will not know until you test your machine.

Also, be sure to check that you don't have any auto overclock features enabled on your BIOS, some BIOS, like the one on my PC did after its last update, turn those options on by default which will leave your system unstable in unpredictable ways. For instance, my system was crashing for months while idle because of it, and then, it started crashing exclusively on games running on Unity.

Also, remember to check that your RAM is not overclocked too high, as that can also cause weird issues in both software and hardware.
So I used a stress test and no issues and no powering down at all
ShadowSkill11 Apr 5, 2024 @ 8:48pm 
Looks like we got another Timmy who can't read min/rec specs on the Steam store page and isn't technically sound enough to evaluate performance levels themselves with different hardware builds.
Amauri14 Apr 5, 2024 @ 9:58pm 
Originally posted by Shadow Monarch:
Originally posted by Amauri14:
What is the wattage of your power supply, and when was the last time you applied thermal paste to your power supply? Your PC shutting down can happen if you either trip your power supply or if your CPU reaches its thermal limit. Try doing some testing to see if it is the CPU is the one causing it by doing a benchmark in Cinebench. Last year I had that issue with my now-dead 2700X because the thermal paste that came with its heat sink ended up drying and fusing the heat sink and CPU. Oh, in case that's happening on your side, try applying some WD-40 to them to separate them, but hopefully that's not what's happening here, but we will not know until you test your machine.

Also, be sure to check that you don't have any auto overclock features enabled on your BIOS, some BIOS, like the one on my PC did after its last update, turn those options on by default which will leave your system unstable in unpredictable ways. For instance, my system was crashing for months while idle because of it, and then, it started crashing exclusively on games running on Unity.

Also, remember to check that your RAM is not overclocked too high, as that can also cause weird issues in both software and hardware.
So I used a stress test and no issues and no powering down at all
Try checking your system event viewer and see the system errors that it gives you before and after the last crash to see if there is anything that can narrow down your problem. The ones that the system logs in under System, in the Windows Logs section.

As you have a Ryzen 9 5950X I am interested to see if you have an error message like this one:

"A fatal hardware error has occurred.

Reported by component: Processor Core
Error Source: Machine Check Exception
Error Type: Cache Hierarchy Error
Processor APIC ID: 1

The details view of this entry contains further information."

Which is the message I got with my Ryzen 7 5700X after I installed it on my system, which was caused by the BIOS activating all the overclocking settings by default after I flashed it.
Last edited by Amauri14; Apr 5, 2024 @ 10:36pm
p00se2 Apr 6, 2024 @ 3:38am 
Originally posted by Gamefever:
HEY OP,
Did anyone tell you it was your CPU yet?


what is the OPs cpu tho
he didnt list it anywhere

theres 3 people in here with shadow in their name tho xD
Last edited by p00se2; Apr 6, 2024 @ 3:38am
Amauri14 Apr 6, 2024 @ 11:01am 
Originally posted by p00se2:
Originally posted by Gamefever:
HEY OP,
Did anyone tell you it was your CPU yet?


what is the OPs cpu tho
he didnt list it anywhere

theres 3 people in here with shadow in their name tho xD
I must say, that I thought I was talking to the OP this whole time. He should try setting the game CPU priority high on the game to see if that boosts his performance. Just by doing that, the game went from mid to low 20 in the city to 45 to 55 on my Ryzen 7 5700X.
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Date Posted: Apr 4, 2024 @ 7:27am
Posts: 37