Hi folks,
Adding my two cents here since I'm also experiencing low fps.
My rig:
Intel i5 2500k OC'ed to 4 Ghz.
GTX 770. No OC.
16 GB corsair RAM at 1600 hz
Asrock Extreme 3 gen 3 motherboard.
Corsair AX860i PSU
x2 OCZ 60 GB SSDs in raid 0.
Windows 7 64 bit.
Running no other programs at all, (closing even Google chrome and steam, everything) I get about 40-45 ish in Daggerfall. I get about 50-60 in the wild, which is playable, but in Cyrodil and major cities my fps is far lower than I expect it to be on a computer like this.
I run everything at maximum, with Vsync off. Reinstalled drivers using safemode and a removal tool, back to the beta 337.50 Nvidia drivers. Shadowplay is off, just in-case that was related.
Worth noting that my CPU and GPU are barely being used to half of their capacity. I took a video to demonstrate, forgive the low quality, my phone's camera is poor. (Ignore the GPU meter shader clock speed, it never displayed it accurately).https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCiUB1BXNiI
This issue seems to me to be related towards the game not properly using all available hardware power. I'd wager those who have consistent fps are at full or near to full capacity on their GPUs.
Adding my two cents here since I'm also experiencing low fps.
...
This issue seems to me to be related towards the game not properly using all available hardware power. I'd wager those who have consistent fps are at full or near to full capacity on their GPUs.
So the answer-was it worth it?
Barely, but still happy. This is what I have come up with for GPU and game settings based off experience and hours of research. Don't forget that a POS CPU will still bring you down.
Ultra settings-gtx 780 ti
High settings-R9 270/x (go with the "x" version if you can)
Medium settings-gtx 550 ti ( I would try to at least make it to the 600 series)
Anything lower I don't know and you'll probably have to turn things way down.
Anyone who doesn't agree with these statements please add your own information in detail so that the community can benefit. Thanks everyone!
@Claym0r3 if you want to party up
FX 6300
8GB
R9 270X DC2 Top from Asus
All high, but intended to disable some settings like depth of field and blur and something related to a lot more detailed shadow (just because i will can't tell the difference anyways)
in dungeons not moving i could reach 100fps,
typical questing 45-60.
towns, 32-55 or something like that, either way I am impressed. but I wish I could have stabilized at around 70 on typical questing cause... you know... OCD and all that crap.
Well, you can notice a difference. Even though your eyes take in around 20 odd FPS, that doesn't mean that watching something that has 30 FPS isn't going to make a difference from watching 40 FPS. Reason behind it is motion blur. In real life wagging your finger you'll see a fluid blur whereas filming your finger wagging on a high FPS camera and watching playback you'll still notice the framed pictures instead of fluid motion.FX 6300
8GB
R9 270X DC2 Top from Asus
All high, but intended to disable some settings like depth of field and blur and something related to a lot more detailed shadow (just because i will can't tell the difference anyways)
in dungeons not moving i could reach 100fps,
typical questing 45-60.
towns, 32-55 or something like that, either way I am impressed. but I wish I could have stabilized at around 70 on typical questing cause... you know... OCD and all that crap.
Long as you don't drop below 30 you won't see much of a difference. The reason people want high regular frames is because it drops by a lot when you go into PvP.