These Settings Will Make You Better - The Finals Settings 2024
As for quality, I'll be setting everything to low but setting the texture to medium because I think it looks a little bit better and the view distance to medium. This seems to give you slightly different models for the trees and the bushes, which will give you better visibility. While you are in the game, you can always play around with these settings if your frames are okay and you want the game to maybe look a little bit better, but that being said, a few non-negotiables will be anti-aliasing.
As this will just make the game feel more blurry, we'll do something else later. foliage, as this adds visual clutter and, of course, shadows. Keeping the settings as low as possible will ensure that you have the most consistent frames in addition to keeping the game as clean visually as possible, which makes it easier to read and track enemies at any point during the game.
While that's all you can do in the game, let's take a look at a few crucial settings out of the game that will increase your performance in the game while at the same time making it look a lot better and getting the obvious out of the way. If you are experiencing any issues with stuttering, the first step will always be to make sure you don't have any pending updates.
Such as out-of-town drivers, as these very often will cause issues. You'll probably have an Nvidia or AMD graphics card, so I will link to the driver download page for both of these manufacturers. If you don't know what graphics card you have, hold Windows and R to open Run, and then type the XD egg and press Enter.
It might ask if you want to check for signed drivers, in which case you click yes, go to display, and your graphics card will show right there. With that out of the way, let's move on with the less commonly known tweaks. Open up the graphics settings and the graphics settings panel. Hit browse, go to your finals folder, which is generally found under your local disk program files, steam apps, common, and the finals, and double-click discovery, Exe.
Once that is done, scroll down to Discovery, Exe, in the graphics panel, click options, select high performance, and click save. After that, in the same Graphics menu, scroll right back up, click on the default Graphics settings, and turn Hardware-accelerated GPU scaling means you're going to need to restart your PC after changing the setting in order for it to actually apply.
After that, once you're back in Windows, hold your Windows key and R key to open the Run window and type in power, Cfg, Init', which is usually set to balance next up. Press your Windows key again to search for gar settings. Click it, and then turn it off. After that, open your Windows key again and search for game mode.
Now, game mode seems to have different results depending on your system, so you want to make sure that this actually works for you. You boot up the finals, jump into the practice range, and then turn the game mode on. Make a mental or actual note of the frame rates you're currently getting in the practice range tab, and then turn the game mode off.
Keep the game mode set to whatever setting you had when it gave you the most FPS. The Tweak enables display-scaled image sharpening in the Nvidia control panel, which, after trying it out, in my opinion feels a lot better than the standard option. Double-click it, run it, click yes, press okay, and then open up your Nvidia control panel head to manage 3D settings.
Go to program settings and select the finals or {34}. If you don't have them, click add, and if you don't find the finals in this list, click browse. Go back to your steam directory that we mentioned earlier, and then add {34} yourself. After that, double-click the image sharpening setting, turn it on, and set the sharpen to 0.3 and ignore the film grain to 0.17.
You can play around with the settings if you like, but I found it was a huge improvement out of the gate, so I didn't see a point in tinkering around with it again. a massive shout out to Comp about this one because I had not heard about this registry file before and it made the world a difference, and now that we have tweaks or settings.
I already hope that your game looks a lot better, but there are a few more things that I want to mention, especially if you're still having issues. First, you need to know that the finals are incredibly CPU-reliant, and if your CPU isn't up to par with the rest of your system, where it in fact acts as a bottleneck, you will have a hard time playing the finals at a good frame rate, as low- and even mid-rate CPUs just won't cut it.
I have a 490, which is a great graphics card to say the least, but I still couldn't keep a stable 100 frames a second before swapping out my 5950 X CPU, which is a great CPU; it's just not made for gaming on a 7800 x 3D. which is, and now I have 240+ stable, so if you have been coting by with a cheaper or lower CPU, thinking you'd get away with only upgrading your graphics card, you're solely mistaken.
Next, if you find that you're crashing a lot, especially if you're getting the Angel C stack error, you are not alone because I had this so many times in the first week of the game, and as far as I know, there's still no official fix for this yet. What worked for me was disabling any overclocking that I previously applied to my CPU through Ryzen Master, and then also disabling PBO in my BIOS.
Some users have reported that disabling XMP in their BIOS has helped as well, but I would rather not do that because this would mean lowering the performance of my system by a long shot. Also. I note that unlike the other things in this article. I'm not going to give a step-by-step tutorial on how to do these things because if you have already tinkered with these settings and overclocking, you should already know how to disable them if you want to cap your frame rate to ensure that your game keeps a consistent frame rate at the same refresh rate as your monitor's RTSS, or what's known as Riva tuner statistics.
The server does not work, in fact, if you are running RTSS. This will interfere with other programs, such as OBS, if you're trying to record or stream. So I really recommend not using it in the first place; instead, if you do want to cap your frames, hold Windows, and R type app data, go to local.
Discovery saved config Windows client, and double-click game user, settings. Ini, scroll down or search for frame limit and set it to whatever you want, then save and close the file, and that is all of it.