- Joined
- May 30, 2018
- Messages
- 1,890 (0.89/day)
- Location
- Cusp Of Mania, FL
Processor | Ryzen 9 3900X |
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Motherboard | Asus ROG Strix X370-F |
Cooling | Dark Rock 4, 3x Corsair ML140 front intake, 1x rear exhaust |
Memory | 2x8GB TridentZ RGB [3600Mhz CL16] |
Video Card(s) | EVGA 3060ti FTW3 Ultra Gaming |
Storage | 970 EVO 500GB nvme, 860 EVO 250GB SATA, Seagate Barracuda 1TB + 4TB HDDs |
Display(s) | 27" MSI G27C4 FHD 165hz |
Case | NZXT H710 |
Audio Device(s) | Modi Multibit, Vali 2, Shortest Way 51+ - LSR 305's, Focal Clear, HD6xx, HE5xx, LCD-2 Classic |
Power Supply | Corsair RM650x v2 |
Mouse | iunno whatever cheap crap logitech *clutches Xbox 360 controller security blanket* |
Keyboard | HyperX Alloy Pro |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | ask your mother |
I feel this. I have a 165hz monitor so I just set the refresh at the highest point likely to hold steady and let vsync do the rest. Sometimes I land in a weird middle ground where half-sync works for a steady 82 fps and thats what it is. Yeah... leave it wide open and it might break 100 at times but when it comes back down its not as nice as going up.I have never got this crazy of uncapped FPS, I see very limited benefit from it, if any at all.
I cap my FPS every game I play, I dont like running components at max load, and I find games run smoother when they running at a cap vs a hardware bottleneck. Not to mention it saves lots of power doing so, so a greener way of gaming.
I like to stay at full or half refresh frame rates. I find that capping anywhere else is somehow "gritty" if that makes sense. Consistent but not smooth.
Tradeoffs though. Losing out with that extra latency. Personally I dont feel that - it just feels smooth to me. But I know for some people, that just totally unplugs them.