Install Steam
login
|
language
简体中文 (Simplified Chinese)
繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
日本語 (Japanese)
한국어 (Korean)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgarian)
Čeština (Czech)
Dansk (Danish)
Deutsch (German)
Español - España (Spanish - Spain)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spanish - Latin America)
Ελληνικά (Greek)
Français (French)
Italiano (Italian)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian)
Magyar (Hungarian)
Nederlands (Dutch)
Norsk (Norwegian)
Polski (Polish)
Português (Portuguese - Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Portuguese - Brazil)
Română (Romanian)
Русский (Russian)
Suomi (Finnish)
Svenska (Swedish)
Türkçe (Turkish)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
Українська (Ukrainian)
Report a translation problem
fr ?? i have 6 gigs of vram doe is it enoguh ??
CPU
Intel Core i5 4430 @ 3.00GHz 52
RAM
16.0GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 799MHz
Motherboard
MSI H87M-G43
Graphics
BenQ GW2470 (1920x1080@60Hz)
2047MB NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 (ZOTAC International)
However, there's not a whole lot that drastically effects frame rate except for resolution, ambient occlusion and shadows. Those are the big ones I've seen.
Modern video cards do so much better with AA these days that I don't even see an increase in fps going from 4x AA to 0x AA.
But, yeah, tinker with your shadows. You probably don't want to play below 1920x1080 and sacrifice image quality that much. Again, ambient occlusion can give a little boost. Those two will add up.
The "Fully Load Textures" option really only helps if you're using all 16GB of RAM and are stuttering because of it.
Honestly, if you're running max settings, 30-50fps sounds good for a GTX 1050.
Edit: I take that back about the Ambient Occlusion. One time I tested it either with the main menu background playing or on Jensen's Range (I can't remember), and it gained around 5 fps. Just tried it in Yehorivka and it made 0 difference lol.
But, yeah, you'll just have to see which options effect your set up the most. I just don't find that many of them really increase my fps a lot, but it could be a bottleneck here or there for me.