Forum Discussion
The First planet you are send to as is in Feros or Noveria?
In general, the MELE has performance issues in specific places that afaik effecting about anyone.
I have a i5 10600k overclocked to 5Ghz meaning a CPU with a relatively high single core performance, and I experience FPS drops on specific places at the Citadel from 165FPS (Vsync) to around 90 at worst 80 FPS.
In some places, such as the Citadel, this happens because the MELE still use a thread (not core, a single thread) and this thread is simply maxed out, i.e. a classic CPU bottleneck occurs where the CPU simply cannot drive the GPU anymore.
But in other places the problems seems to be different.
What I see in your HWInfo log is that your CPU is not taxed at all.
You did al lot of troubleshooting, I would suggest you disable the energy saving features of your INTEL CPU in the BIOS and test afterwards.
(That are EIST, CPU C State Control, CPU P-States Control and so on.)
Edit: Thanks for the additional files, and yes I don't think your GPU is the problem here.
@holger1405 By first planet, I meant the first mission in ME:1 where you start the game on the Normandy, then meet with Captain Anderson, then go down to the planet where
As far as the power settings go, unfortunately, it doesn't look like I have any options in the BIOS that have anything to do with power saving, the closest I can do is manage the processor power settings via the windows power plan advanced interface (screenshot for current settings attached).
- 5 years ago
If you're playing OUTRIDERS fine, that probably rules out thermal issues.
There have been rare reports where performance dives off a cliff after a short amount of time in the games. This could be that.
You'll have to search around and see if anybody found any solution (if it turns out to be the same problem).
- holger14055 years agoHero+
That would be Eden Prime.
I guess this also made no difference?
I can't say why your system is not utilized by he game. If it would be a third party service or application the clean boot should have taken care of that.
There are some things you could try:
- Disconnect the additional Monitors > Reboot > Test.
- Disconnect all additional hardware (Cameras, external HDDs controlers and so on) > Reboot > Test.
- Disable the Realtek sound driver > reboot > test.
- I might be wrong about the reason for this problem, so a clean reinstallation of your graphic drivers might be a good idea.
Use DDU for that.
Follow this manual to the letter to cleanly uninstall all NVIDIA components.
Install the graphics driver > Go online.
Test. - Updating Windows to the current build 19043.
- 5 years ago
@holger1405 All steps taken, no peripherals or monitors, disabled audio driver, went through DDU process to completely uninstall and reinstall latest NVIDIA driver, and unfortunately, still not having any effect on the throttling.
- holger14055 years agoHero+
All as well as the Audio driver and the Windows suggestion?