7 Days to Die

7 Days to Die

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Performance Windows 11
Greetings.
Had upgraded windows to 11, performance gets partly really bad.
Means you run(not walk), fells like you stand on glue then there are massive frame which aren´t displayed, then you stood at a place where you normally should be, but without seeing the movement.
Had a tier 6 quest which ends in a zombie spawn trigger due to this with a really good beating for me.
Had same settings like windows 10, there i had no glitches, what helps is setting vsync down to half from full.
And no, its not the equipment. (rtx 4080 s /7800x3d(64gb ram).
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honestycvt a écrit :
Greetings.
Had upgraded windows to 11
How did you upgrade it?

honestycvt a écrit :
And no, its not the equipment. (rtx 4080 s /7800x3d(64gb ram).
Could be your settings in windows though and/or in-game settings. Or apps running in the background. Or because of your monitor and settings. Or because of your GPU settings, (and/or auto software settings). Or because of Windows 11 terrible performance. Or because your BIOS is not updated. You didn't list any of these factors.

This game relies more on the CPU and memory usage than anything else. Your GPU don't matter much.
I have vsync off
win 11 is total ass and obnoxious as hell. upgrade to windows 7
Thanx for the answers.
@James: Upgraded via the offer from win 10.
And this game as far as i expierienced is the only one where i had this issues right now.
GPU Driver and Bios are "new" . not the newest thou but new.


@Philco: Thanx, had half Vsync that helped, will try with off when next time in game.
Dernière modification de honestycvt; 4 avr. à 21h13
honestycvt a écrit :
Thanx for the answers.
@James: Upgraded via the offer from win 10.
Thats what I thought, which is why I asked. You let Windows upgrade it for you, and this can cause problems down the road because Windows will leave "old" files of Win 10 that are not supposed to be used by Win 11. But because Win 11 is so buggy, it WILL use those files instead of the replacement files it is intended to use.

I strongly suggest to you and everyone else to manually install windows 11 instead of using their bugged out built-in "upgrade" version. It's super fast and easy to do, and you will save yourself a lot of headaches in the future.
Dernière modification de James; 4 avr. à 21h59
But that requires nuking your existing OS installation and everything else with it, then starting from scratch. In order to "upgrade" to an inferior version of Windows that has oodles of bloat and spyware built in. Not an appealing deal.

I'll be buying Win10 security patches for the next 5 years and hoping that Linux support for Windows games continues to improve.

I'd pay for a version of Win11 without the bloatware and spyware, but of course MS don't sell one. Bloat and spyware is the core of their business now.
Win 11... YOU are the product....
just go look at the amount of garbage network traffic, news feed stock weather, where are you...
store updates....
av updates
system updates

no wonder it is a complete cow pat of a product....
Tahnval, You went way off-topic from the OP's issue but I'll entertain it.

Tahnval a écrit :
But that requires nuking your existing OS installation and everything else with it, then starting from scratch.
You're starting from scratch anyways whenever you upgrade an O/S, regardless of how you do it. So that part has no bearing on the subject. What is important is understanding the process and taking the best approach.

For one, never take your important information for granted. Which means, never leave anything important on your main drive. Ever. This way, if anything happens and you have to format or replace your primary drive, you don't lose anything important and it makes the transition that much easier, and less problematic in the long run because of how "upgrading' works within windows. It's a flawed system. So if you have to start from scratch, then it's always best to erase the primary drive and do a complete reinstall.

Tahnval a écrit :
In order to "upgrade" to an inferior version of Windows that has oodles of bloat and spyware built in. Not an appealing deal.
To YOU it may not be an appealing option, but to others it is.

Tahnval a écrit :
I'll be buying Win10 security patches for the next 5 years and hoping that Linux support for Windows games continues to improve.
Good luck finding game devs who will waste time supporting an unsupported version of Windows after October of this year. Also, this whole notion that Linux is totally secure and without flaws and backdoors is completely false. But I digress, this isn't the thread for this subject.

Also, FYI, the ESU won't last 5 years. It will be for 1 year ONLY and then you will be forced to upgrade, and so you may as well as do it the right away. The extended upgrade is mainly for businesses (such as hospitals, schools, etc) to give them a chance to transition so much information on so many several different servers--which takes ALOT of time. They are offering it to home users as well, but it will not be as supportive, and it damn sure won't last 5 years. And, as someone who works in cyber security, I don't recommend trusting the lack luster support that Microsoft are going to provide to neither businesses or users because it's not going to stop the flood of zero day attacks. After October, hackers are going to flood ANY system still running Win 10, knowing they are no longer being FULLY supported.

Alot of us already seen this happen when Windows XP transitioned to Windows 7, and then Windows 7 to Windows 10.

Tahnval a écrit :
I'd pay for a version of Win11 without the bloatware and spyware, but of course MS don't sell one. Bloat and spyware is the core of their business now.
I agree, and I'm sure many would pay for that version too. But that will never happen because Microsoft knows they have a monopoly and sponsorship has always been a part of their business practice.

That said, you can get Win 11 without the bloatware and spyware by using trusted third-party software that disable any intrusive part of Windows that you don't ever use, or feel safe with.

https://winaerotweaker.com/

USE THIS CAREFULLY!!!!

FULLY UNDERSTAND ALL OPTIONS BEFORE YOU MAKE ANY CHANGES!!!!!!

I CANT STRESS THAT ENOUGH!!!!

Just a fair warning to you (or anyone else who may read this), NEVER disable Microsoft store. Yes, it's intrusive, and it even violates privacy laws in some countries/states/provinces around the world, but disabling this will cause other important aspects of Windows to either act erratically, or stop working entirely. Both of which can cause problems in the long run.
keep disabling MS store , show MS it is YOUR computer not theirs....
Then go file an anti-trust complaint against them.
All the side effects are MS forcing you to keep the store, they WANT users loading up the machines with ♥♥♥♥♥ & malware....

Because waiting in the wings is a WHOLE new theme-park of MS ♥♥♥♥♥♥♥♥ tie in.
then have a WHOLE new railroad diagram of how they are going to charge monthly fees to make your computer useful.
Remember "you will own nothing and be happy"
Let's be clear here, Win11 is not an 'upgrade'. It's a shove-down-our-throats update -breaking a lot of our beloved things-, with the intent of making more money for MS.

I'll stick to 10 until absolutely necessary.
James a écrit :
Tahnval, You went way off-topic from the OP's issue but I'll entertain it.

Tahnval a écrit :
But that requires nuking your existing OS installation and everything else with it, then starting from scratch.
You're starting from scratch anyways whenever you upgrade an O/S, regardless of how you do it. So that part has no bearing on the subject. What is important is understanding the process and taking the best approach.

Not with more recent versions of Windows. You can upgrade in place, which many people do. It might not be the best way, but it usually works. I did that going from 7 to 10. No problems.

For one, never take your important information for granted. Which means, never leave anything important on your main drive. Ever. This way, if anything happens and you have to format or replace your primary drive, you don't lose anything important

I agree. Anything important on my PC is backed up to separate storage. If I really care, it's on a USB stick in my wallet as well.

That's reminded me...I haven't done that for the password manager for my email. I should get around to remembering to do that.

and it makes the transition that much easier, and less problematic in the long run because of how "upgrading' works within windows. It's a flawed system. So if you have to start from scratch, then it's always best to erase the primary drive and do a complete reinstall.

I agree with that as well. But that hasn't stopped me accepting the convenience of upgrading in place.

Tahnval a écrit :
In order to "upgrade" to an inferior version of Windows that has oodles of bloat and spyware built in. Not an appealing deal.
To YOU it may not be an appealing option, but to others it is.

Sure. Some people don't put much weight on performance, security or privacy. That's their business. But even to those people Win11 isn't usually appealing in itself. There's not much new to to that many people want.

Tahnval a écrit :
I'll be buying Win10 security patches for the next 5 years and hoping that Linux support for Windows games continues to improve.
Good luck finding game devs who will waste time supporting an unsupported version of Windows after October of this year.

I'll see what happens. It's not like Win11 is a fundamentally different OS to Win10.

Also, this whole notion that Linux is totally secure and without flaws and backdoors is completely false. [..]

I didn't say that it is. It's better than Win11 in those respects. That doesn't mean it is (or has to be) perfect.

Also, FYI, the ESU won't last 5 years.

True, but there is a company that provides security updates for EOL versions of Windows and they will do so for 5 years after EOL. For a fee, of course, but it's not much.

Tahnval a écrit :
I'd pay for a version of Win11 without the bloatware and spyware, but of course MS don't sell one. Bloat and spyware is the core of their business now.
I agree, and I'm sure many would pay for that version too. But that will never happen because Microsoft knows they have a monopoly and sponsorship has always been a part of their business practice.

That said, you can get Win 11 without the bloatware and spyware by using trusted third-party software that disable any intrusive part of Windows that you don't ever use, or feel safe with.

https://winaerotweaker.com/

USE THIS CAREFULLY!!!!

FULLY UNDERSTAND ALL OPTIONS BEFORE YOU MAKE ANY CHANGES!!!!!!

I CANT STRESS THAT ENOUGH!!!!

That's useful to know. Thank you.
Dernière modification de Tahnval; 8 avr. à 0h19
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