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Set this to "off" or "adaptive", if you set it to off do the same for the games.
Monitors have a Refreash rating that works to connect inputs securely as quickly as possible.
For example 1ms for some 4k monitors , or 5ms or in panel switching monitor (IPS)
Now that you have the refreash ratings you should determine if the devcies attached are secure.
In Windows 10 there is a setting that will help you determine, as isn't always needed to be on.
Go to setting: Windows Security-Device security- Core isolation. Make sure to turn on Memory intergrity.
This will tell you to reboot/restart the PC
When you return to signing in go to the same window and you'l either see a prompt that you have poor hardware or NOT.
If not then you can continue to disagnose the issue.
One. work with the MEM, CPU, GPU. not against each other.
If the monitor gets 60 FPS on 1920x1080p on HDMI then use that to test.
If the monitor get 30 FPS on 3840x2160 on DVI then use that.
What i mean is when your monitor connects the the gpu the motherboard needs to run it.
The mother board has a PCI slot that will tell you what the highest rendering cababilities is can process and this is Tied directly to the cpu and memory.
Each PCIE lane has't to work off the CPU construct and this means it has to read and write mem a certain way and the faster but securer the better.
In other words, if your CPU can push 16 lanes at 64 GB and runs at best an AMD 680M anything less will work unless you mother board can slot a better GPU whcih this will be said in the MB manual.
And Each GPU needs RAM as a scratch service (hard disk; Memory-Ram Modules)
The most important thing is Faster isn't always better because humans can read faster then writing which means you'll notice the slight slow downs more often as you get better Computer parts. Security of this transaction is key and paramount. Somethings like SLC cache can greatly change the productive work of each part, and ECC power states are unmatched.
Going with lots of Ram isn't always the best option. You should have enough Ram in the system that you can easily have around double the amount required to operate.
I mean, if a game requires 16 GB of RAM and 100 GB of Had disk going with 32GB or RAM and 200 GB free space is the best option.
Try to not move the RAM around in their slots as this will ruin syncing the data banks and registry will be so messed it will produce lags just because the Ram sticks were slotted out of order.
It gets even better when you Run the fastest at default because right out of the gate it's designed to run that way.
In all have a great time with it. learn about your goods. take not that they will get old and software is what makes them run well. So, the older they get they are 3 times better after 10 years.
If anyone says to you securing the system is wrong.
Take note: If you have a device that you made some software for the device has it's limits or it's will not produce you anything if the platform easily misses the target you aim to Accomplish. The securer the device is means the transaction WILL hit the target you aim to achieve.