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Fordítási probléma jelentése
What are your system specs?
Yes you can.
Windows 10 64bit
8 GB RAM
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 -5005u @2.00Ghz
Nvidia Geforce 920m
But yes, you can't increase VRAM.
Do you have a laptop? In that case there is nothing you can do beside a new PC
If you have a desktop then get a dedicated GPU or if you already have one, connect the monitor to the GPU instead of the Motherboard.
Dedicated video memory is VRAM... It physically soldered to the graphics card PCB next to the GPU
Your Nvidia GPU can have up to 4gb of dedicated Vram. This can not be increased, unless you have a soldering iron, the 4gb limit has not yet been met and the mobo has room for it.
The Intel HD doesn't have any Vram and uses the System RAM instead, this can be increased but increasing it is useless since the system will dump everything that does not fit within the set allocated RAM limit in to the system RAM anyway.
The 128mb you are seeing is the Intel HD and the 4181mb is the Nvidia.
hes probably seeing the Shared video memory of his 8GB RAM which would be 4GB, that GPU is only 1GB or 2GB VRAM at the most, unlikely a 920m would be 4GB VRAM.
This extra video RAM is meant for content creation, high definition video playback/streaming etc.. not for gaming.
Its the whole "Total Available Graphics Memory" bit which leads me to believe hes talking about Shared Memory
But yeah, with a GPU so weak theres no way to make it any better for gaming.
And Windows is always wrong about ALL VRAM #s
Only the # for "Dedicated" is in fact real.
Shared is meaningless. If your GPU shares RAM, things will become so slow that FPS will drop big time. You never want this to occur, period.
It doesn't really matter what the available RAM is for the Intel GPU; for anything D3D/OGL/Vulkan you want to use the NVIDIA GPU, which has it's own dedicated video memory (aka VRAM)
Wipe your Intel HD Graphics and NVIDIA Graphics Drivers out fully.
Go download the latest for:
> Intel Chipset INF
> Intel HD Graphics 5500
> NVIDIA > Geforce > 9xxM series (M = Mobile version) > OS version...
Then install these one by one, rebooting after each completes.
When done all 3 of these and rebooted after the NVIDIA is complete.
Launch NVIDIA Control Panel > go to Manage 3D Settings > change these...
> Power Management = Prefer Max Performance
> Max pre-rendered frames = 1
> Threaded = On
> VSync = Off
And for the "Graphics" = Auto > Change this to High Performance
in order to ensure the NVIDIA is always used by default whenever you launch an app/game that's driven by DirectX/OpenGL/Vulkan
So with some cards you can unlock it with bios flashing...
Of course its not increasing physically..