Brittany_Joy wrote: »Disabling anti-aliasing and vertical-sync improves FPS by alot. For example; my asus k53ta can run ESO with 19fps on any settings with anti-aliasing/vertical-sync enabled but if I disable anti-aliasing/vertical-sync my FPS improves to 20-34 FPS, averaging at 30 on medium settings with all the details and sub-sampling at high. Also adjusting your gamma settings can help too. These are just my tips for improving performance without sacrificing too much detail.
gokhanuzmez wrote: »
Well the ATI settings says enabling Verticle Sync improves frame rate?
I am around 30 with high settings somehow which is good, should I mess with it ?
gokhanuzmez wrote: »Brittany_Joy wrote: »Disabling anti-aliasing and vertical-sync improves FPS by alot. For example; my asus k53ta can run ESO with 19fps on any settings with anti-aliasing/vertical-sync enabled but if I disable anti-aliasing/vertical-sync my FPS improves to 20-34 FPS, averaging at 30 on medium settings with all the details and sub-sampling at high. Also adjusting your gamma settings can help too. These are just my tips for improving performance without sacrificing too much detail.
Well the ATI settings says enabling Verticle Sync improves frame rate?
I am around 30 with high settings somehow which is good, should I mess with it ?
Several ways to greatly improve your performance:
1) Lower the resolution. I enjoy 1400x1050. It's not bad, though not the best. Anything lower will start to look fuzzy. Stay away from 1024x768.
2) Set subsampling to medium. Low looks like crap outside of max resolution. Those heavily pixelated graphics you're referring to are the result of this. High will eat up your framerate. Medium is a nice compromise as long as you don't mind a slightly more dated appearance.
3) Turn shadows to low or off. Shadows KILL framerates on mobile GPUs.
Ambient occlusion can improve the overall look of the game without a huge framterate loss, but leaving it off will improve performance. Everything else should probably be off, except for grass - That has little to no effect on framerate and gives life to the world. Trust me, it's really dull with no grass.
Vsync can probably be off unless you're suffering from major tearing/artifact issues. Also, set the view distance down to around 50. Lower it as needed. Even at 0, you can still see far off enemies and resource nodes. In fact, I'm pretty sure the only important thing(eye candy aside) it effects is the visibility of skyshards.
As for anti-aliasing, it's probably best left off if you're using anything less than high subsampling. It just looks terrible otherwise, IMO.
Frail_Old_Man wrote: »There is a LOT of hidden graphical options that are tied to the presets.
Set preset to minimum or low; Increase everything manually after that except the preset or atleast increase 'subsampling' to high. Disable water reflections.
PvP is a bit more CPU heavy.
I'm getting 40-60fps in large PvP fights when I roll with low preset(with almost everything turned high/on)
Frail_Old_Man wrote: »There is a LOT of hidden graphical options that are tied to the presets.
Set preset to minimum or low; Increase everything manually after that except the preset or atleast increase 'subsampling' to high. Disable water reflections.
PvP is a bit more CPU heavy.
I'm getting 40-60fps in large PvP fights when I roll with low preset(with almost everything turned high/on)
On laptops, also make sure you have sufficient cooling. Most will start to throttle or underclock after reaching temps in the 80s (Celsius). Manufacturers consider programming this in the BIOS a 'cooling feature'.
I had a laptop with a 540m and after putting it on a fan on my floor I was getting 40fps + compared to how it played while on a cooling mat. Almost unplayable before after ten mins.
Just a tip to get the most out of the hardware that's there, heat is always an issue with laptops