Counter-Strike 2

Counter-Strike 2

CS2 FPS BENCHMARK DUST2
hues8 Oct 2, 2024 @ 11:58am
CS2 FPS BENCHMARKS - LOOKING FOR PERFECT SETTINGS
Playing with Nvidia REFLEX:

BOOST FPS: Avg=455.3, P1=190.9
ON FPS: Avg=464.6, P1=181.1
DISABLE FPS: Avg=462.6, P1=186.2

PC SPECTS
CPU: RYZEN 5 5600X (4,4GHZ 1,1V OVERCLOCK)
GPU: RTX 2060 SUPER (DEFAULT SETTINGS)
RAM: 2 X 8GB 3200MHZ
MOTHER: B450M STEEL LEGEND

ALL LOW, OPTIMUM NVIDIA PANEL SETTINGS, SUPER LIGHT WINDOWS ISO, DEBLOAT ALL WINDOWS ♥♥♥♥ (CHRIS TITUS TECH SCRIPT).

I probably stick with DISABLING Nvidia Reflex, looking for balance between avg fps and 1% low
Last edited by hues8; Feb 11 @ 9:45pm
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Showing 1-8 of 8 comments
ON without BOOST; the 2FPS won't make a difference and your latency will be lower with it being on ON.

Also, that's a pretty high V for 4.2GHz but whatever.
wid3l3c Oct 22, 2024 @ 2:56pm 
It's a really decent result for 5600.
Maybe you could improve a bit by changing RAM to 3600 so FCLK would work 1:1 with RAM.

Other thing, 4.2 GHZ? It's a downclock or you wrote CPU speed without boost, which changes when you're ingame.


About NV Reflex I personally see difference on/off even offline games with bots.
Game, I mean HSes are more accurate when on+boost than off.

It's hard to discuss with you because of your Windows overall when you with "♥♥♥♥♥♥ PC" get better results than many other guys with potentially better PCs.
blackiie Nov 10, 2024 @ 4:32pm 
Originally posted by livin soil:
Playing with Nvidia REFLEX:

BOOST FPS: Avg=455.3, P1=190.9
ON FPS: Avg=464.6, P1=181.1
DISABLE FPS: Avg=462.6, P1=186.2

PC SPECTS
CPU: RYZEN 5 5600X (4,2GHZ 1,1V OVERCLOCK)
GPU: RTX 2060 SUPER (DEFAULT SETTINGS)
RAM: 2 X 8GB 3200MHZ
MOTHER: B450M STEEL LEGEND

ALL LOW, OPTIMUM NVIDIA PANEL SETTINGS, SUPER LIGHT WINDOWS ISO, DEBLOAT ALL WINDOWS ♥♥♥♥ (CHRIS TITUS TECH SCRIPT).

I probably stick with DISABLING Nvidia Reflex, looking for balance between avg fps and 1% low

What about frame times do you find them consistent ? i have the same config as you (5600 cpu) but i keep getting unstable frame times can reach 25 ms sometimes
gully* Dec 6, 2024 @ 3:22pm 
multisampling is HUGE for fps gain. From cmaa2 to 2x MSAA is roughly 40-50 fps gain. id say it eats up more fps than all other settings.
Originally posted by gully*:
multisampling is HUGE for fps gain. From cmaa2 to 2x MSAA is roughly 40-50 fps gain. id say it eats up more fps than all other settings.
you mean in reverse right
Lucas Jan 8 @ 12:37pm 
How do you have 1% lows of 190? That is very high.

I have a 5600X (like you) with a 3060TI and my 1% lows are 150, which seems to be standard for this configuration. My settings are optimized. How do you have 40 more FPS?

We should be asking you for advice not the other way around.
Last edited by Lucas; Jan 8 @ 12:40pm
hues8 Feb 12 @ 8:00pm 
Hi everyone, actually getting 536 fps avg and 184 P1

r5 5600x - 4,6ghz 1,15v
2060 super
b450m steel legend
2 x 8gb 3200mhz

CS2 video settings: very low, 1280x960
CS2 launch options: -noreflex -freq 280 -refresh 280 +fps_max 0 -nohltv

nvidia panel control settings: all default, only "Texture Filtering - Quality" to HIGH PERFORMANCE
NVIDIA driver debloated, also using 551.23 version
Windows 10 fully debloated

BIOS options: SVM off, XMP Profile ON
Windows: Game Mode ON (need to try this off yet), HAGS ON

Just sticking with this config for now, i broke my personal record of 455.3, P1=190.9, still need to get better p1 frams
wid3l3c Feb 23 @ 2:58pm 
P1 represents the lowest FPS, which is primarily determined by the CPU. AVG (average) FPS, on the other hand, is mainly influenced by the GPU and can be artificially boosted by lowering graphical settings. In reality, it's the CPU that dictates the lowest FPS, and during intense action on screen, the high FPS numbers—achieved in less demanding moments—create a misleading impression of performance. The maximum FPS you can reach is completely irrelevant if your CPU chokes during critical moments and drops FPS significantly.

5600x is the limit.
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