

Depending on the design of the manufacturer, some cards will run without issues at insanely higher clocks, some will not. This will result to higher temperature and higher power draw. Overclocking is basically running the graphics card at higher clocks than what the manufacturer has set. Overclocking graphics card is the cheapest way to boost performance out of your graphics card – it costs absolutely nothing from the overclocking software to the process. When using links on our site to make a purchase, we may earn an affiliate commission. The crash took down my whole machine from the software (did not need to hold down the physical power button), but rebooted fine.Gaming PC Builder is reader-supported. However, I got a hard crash after playing for about three minutes (game play was responsive up until the crash). So then I turned on Direct X 12, and all looked good. S21:16:38 GMT jebbuhdiah said:I tried turning off vsync, and the result was super-laggy (this is at 4k).


Please keep the suggestions and teachings coming - I am very glad to keep on trying different things and learning more! It didn't crash or anything but is a little "slurred" - would be cool to clean that up.

I tried Battlefield I (also from EA) and it works pretty well on 4k, but is a bit laggy: I have vsyc on, hdr on, no option for Direct X 12. To get back to good gameplay, I turned off Direct X 12 Support, turned resolution down to 2560 (x1440), and turned Vsync back on.ĮA does note that they have an upcoming fix for Direct X 12, and recommends turning it off if needed: help.ea.com/en/help/star-wars/star-wars-battlefront-ii/troubleshoot-star-wars-battlefront-ii/ The crash took down my whole machine from the software (did not need to hold down the physical power button), but rebooted fine. I tried turning off vsync, and the result was super-laggy (this is at 4k).
