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The ONLY SETTINGS you need to CHANGE to get more FPS in Windows 11 | 2024



How to install NVIDIA App:

0:00 Intro
0:15 Restore point
0:34 Tutorial

Specs :
ASUS ROG STRIX G16
i7-13650HX
RTX 4060 (Laptop)
16 GB DDR5 4800 MHz

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7 Comments

  1. Wow this video blew up, sorry if some of the tips mentioned in the video are common, but i made this video for some people who might not know that much about PCs and these settings helped me. Please subscribe, as I'm trying my hardest to make as short as possible videos on PC tips that i know work 100%. I could make a 30 minute+ video like everyone else and fill it with useless settings and bloatware, that don't even help. Thanks for watching!

  2. Hardware acceleration has pro and cons, but some games with some builds noticably decrease in performace if enabled, e. g. Warzone.
    I think it depends on system and game engine, so its always a great idea to make A/B comparison tests to see any difference in 1% lows and stability.
    On my old system i turned it off and everything runs very smooth.
    Regularly clearing shader cache after getting increased micro stutters on dx12 also a great idea, esp after game updates.

  3. Please don't just do this. Read more here for the general things I do when building and selling high performance machines. And generally I do this to all of my personal machines. I don't really recommend changing much on laptops, as, heat can be an issue.

    Please install Windows 11 (Generally better for gaming), and avoid the bloat, and run Refyne & Hellzerg and choose your preferences. All of these Windows settings are by default, the only thing that will help knock out any weird stutters in games isnt a Windows clean-up tool. Please simply clear shader cache of all your games, or change the caching size in NVIDIA Control Panel (Or Radeon software).

    For BIOS optimization, please make sure your RAM runs at its rated speeds, if you use NVIDIA enable Rebar to see if it boosts your FPS (Not always, it can actually sometimes HINDER performance). For AMD, its named "SAM" (Smart Access Memory).
    For AMD CPUs enable PBO and set it to automatic, AMD CPUs are made for "Balanced" power plan, so please use this inside of Windows (Cores automatically sleep & wake),
    For AMD CPUs enable IPM and set it to auto, or manually configure, intel CPUs work great with high performance power plan, so use that inside of Windows. (Cores work a bit different, sadly I haven't tested).

    For NVIDIA control panel:
    – Set your Phys-X processor to your GPU, or if your GPU is too weak and you have spare resource when running games on CPU, select your CPU.
    – Set Performance mode where possible
    – Enable G-SYNC etc, if your monitor is compatible

    For general GPU overclocking, I would use MSI Afterburner for anything heavy, and just increasing by increments and running small stress tests, checking temperatures. Anything below 85 is generally fine, but if your system has optimal cooling it should have around 60-70 Celsius max. (Overclocking is safe, but it solely depends on the cooling, if you do an unstable overclock and the system wont boot, just reset CMOS and it will come back without a real issue). (If your OC loads WITH windows, enable safemode, and remove that manually, and it wont have an issue).

    NVCleanstall is a MUST for GPU drivers. You can contact me on Discord if you want a no-bloat walkthrough to custom installing GPU drivers that way: @Dubozze

    Have fun:)