Steamをインストール
ログイン
|
言語
简体中文(簡体字中国語)
繁體中文(繁体字中国語)
한국어 (韓国語)
ไทย (タイ語)
български (ブルガリア語)
Čeština(チェコ語)
Dansk (デンマーク語)
Deutsch (ドイツ語)
English (英語)
Español - España (スペイン語 - スペイン)
Español - Latinoamérica (スペイン語 - ラテンアメリカ)
Ελληνικά (ギリシャ語)
Français (フランス語)
Italiano (イタリア語)
Bahasa Indonesia(インドネシア語)
Magyar(ハンガリー語)
Nederlands (オランダ語)
Norsk (ノルウェー語)
Polski (ポーランド語)
Português(ポルトガル語-ポルトガル)
Português - Brasil (ポルトガル語 - ブラジル)
Română(ルーマニア語)
Русский (ロシア語)
Suomi (フィンランド語)
Svenska (スウェーデン語)
Türkçe (トルコ語)
Tiếng Việt (ベトナム語)
Українська (ウクライナ語)
翻訳の問題を報告
ryzen 1600 single-thread benchmark - 1823
g4560 - 1986
So I wouldn't expect an fps increase due to the cpu "upgrade".
Then as the fps went down with the ryzen I would run a Passmark benchmark to see if it is performing correctly,
https://www.passmark.com/products/performancetest/download.php
then check the cpu score against this -
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=AMD+Ryzen+5+1600&id=2984
Your previous system was balanced, now not so much.
Only thing to really try is DDU in safe mode, then custom install the latest NVIDIA driver
Choose Driver Only
Custom Install
Deselect everything but PhysX and install
If this doesnt resolve your FPS differences then its likely due to the CPU.
The cpu is about 10% low, which is not a major issue. But it's low.
The gpu is about 30% low, so that seems to be where the problem is.
Do the DDU stuff.
Don't use geforce experience.
Make sure the nvidia control panel settings are set for max performance.
Also the bios and windows power plan settings.
What gpu model is it?
What power supply model do you have?
Maybe try just uninstalling the driver, see if Windows installs some basic ones that work better.