• How Do You Set Your Graphic Settings II
    16 replies, posted
Tell us how you set your graphic settings. As said before, I usually set it to the highest, then lower to maintain a good framerate. Note: In the choices that involve maintaining 120 FPS, in games that you can't I'd assume you pick the next choice, like 60 FPS for example
[QUOTE=ManiacKiller;39708719]Tell us how you set your graphic settings. As said before, I usually set it to the highest, then lower to maintain a good framerate.[/QUOTE] Isn't this what everyone ever does?
I set it past the highest then feed my computer small children to sustain those settings.
[QUOTE=Jacinth;39708730]Isn't this what everyone ever does?[/QUOTE] I could imagine a few people who would totally sacrifice graphic quality for maximum FPS. (Either because they're FPS whores or they just can't run every game well.)
Highest first, then lower until 20 fps.
[QUOTE=ManiacKiller;39708740]I could imagine a few people who would totally sacrifice graphic quality for maximum FPS.[/QUOTE] Oh I guess.
Highest first, then lower till playable if not. No specific FPS.
If it's a single player game, then I'm going for as high as possible with a minimum of 30 fps. Multiplayer games, 120fps minimum mostly. Obviously a 120hz monitor here.
Highest i can get it. I've never been picky about framerate like some people here.
I always pick low, because this computer can't seem to play anything above it without lagging.
I like to play my games as slideshow. So yeah, ultra high.
Depending on the game mostly though, but I try to [i]get[/i] 30 fps with full res (1280x1024) buut my HD4650 ain't cutting it anymore. 30FPS if lucky nowadays. On lowest. Sometimes I raise my texture quality and TRY to have some shadows. I don't care if my FPS drops by 5 or something around that, I want dem shadows.
Highest first and usually stick with it. If things get too shitty I'll reduce anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering a step at a time. The good thing with my set up is I have a pretty low resolution monitor (1366x768), and so my 2010 HD5830 can still manage to run recent releases on their high settings with no trouble.
I put it on the highest resolution but keep basically everything at medium. If I had more RAM, I'd crank them up to high.
I usually put everything on the highest, and if the game runs too slow I lower the antialiasing and shadows and other crap I can barely notice.
I'll lower them to get around 60 fps, but that's max settings on most games. Not bad for an old hd5750. Maybe now that new consoles are coming we will actually see some evolution in graphics. Its messed up how most new games still look just like new games from 2008.
Lowest and only on lowest with the slim chance that even that will run at 30FPS.
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