![]() ![]() Unfortunately I didn’t and can’t provide that information. In hindsight, I should’ve checked HWMonitor to see if there was out of the ordinary with the system. The resolution on my 1080p monitor had lowered significantly to 640x480, and the color quality was atrocious. When the the login screen loaded, I was even more concerned. There was an abundance of white horizontal lines across my screen, which persisted through the entire boot process. Once I saw the BIOS screen, I knew something was wrong. I restarted once again, quite annoyed that this was happening. I restarted my computer thinking to myself “oh, it’s just another bug Valve should fix.” However, it began to get progressively worse, this time crashing the my computer while the game was loading. I was playing Team Fortress 2 when it started artifacting and froze. ![]() Everything was working fine until yesterday. I’ve kept all of the drivers and BIOS up to date, and occasionally checked temperatures with HWMonitor, CPU-Z, and GPU-Z. I finished building my rig in June 2014 and haven’t made any changes to its hardware since. This is the quickest and easiest way to set the best optimal settings based upon your own hardware for a balance of highest quality and performance your system can manage.I wasn’t sure where to post this since I’m new.ĮVGA GTX 780 Ti ACX with NZXT G10 cooling bracket installed and Corsair H90 cooler Then under the 'Games' tab, apply optimal settings to each game. Now go back under 'GeForce Experience' > Perferences > Games > Add new locations for your games if required, such as the Steam directory, and 'Check Now' to scan for them. Under 'Stereoscopic 3D', disable it for now if you don't have the glasses, not a very good compatible game for 3D or simple don't wish to use. This is to ensure you haven't overwritten any optimal in-game settings. Under 'Manage 3D settings', click 'Restore' defaults on the Global Settings. Under 'Adjust image settings', ensure it's set to 'Let the 3D application decide'. If it's not already - under 'Change Resolution', set to 1920x1080 (native), color depth at highest (32-bit) and refresh rate at 144Hz. Rock up to Nvidia Drivers or use GeForce Experience Software (which offers the drivers as well):ĭownload that, clean install all the drivers (tick them ensuring you have the latest 3D Vision, etc). The following settings were used to create the profiles but feel free to adjust if necessary -īrightness= 24 (gave 160 cd/m2 on our unit, adjust as required) Set the monitor to ‘Standard Mode’ at 144Hz. I believe using CTRL+T in games is also a shortcut to switch 3D mode on and off, but can cause slowdowns during the driver toggle. Perhaps purchase NVIDIA 3D Vision 2 glasses, if you have it running in 3D Mode? Else go into the Nvidia control panel, and uncheck 'Stereoscopic 3D'. ![]()
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January 2023
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