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Kimmi81's avatar
2 years ago
Solved

Sims 3 graphics distorted on new gaming laptop

Hello,

Could someone help me figure out why the graphics on the Sims 3 are distorted on my new gaming laptop and if there's a fix? My graphics card is an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070

Thanks in advance.

  • Kimmi81's avatar
    Kimmi81
    2 years ago

    @holger1405 and @puzzlezaddict, I managed to solve it! 

    Because the Nvidia GPU Activity panel showed there was "no display connected to this GPU", I decided to investigate that further and saw, in the Nvidia control panel, that my laptop's display was set to always use the integrated card. So, while the game was using the Nvidia GPU, the display was not, which apparently caused issues in full screen mode. Because once I set the display to use the Nvidia card as well, the distortion was gone. 

    Now I'm not sure I want the display to always use the Nvidia card and might choose to play in windowed mode after all, but at least I think I've found the issue and know I have options now. 

    Thanks for your help and if you have any more comments or ideas about this, please letme know. 

40 Replies

  • holger1405's avatar
    holger1405
    Hero+
    2 years ago

    @Kimmi81 

    There are three settings:

    1. high-performance NVIDIA processor

    2. Integrated graphics.

    3. Auto-select.

    Any laptop that is not stationary and always plugged in should use point 3, Auto Select.

    That way the system will choose the appropriate GPU for the task at hand. This shouldn't cause any graphical artefacts, of course.

    Auto Select is the default setting, wasn't that the case on your system?

    What happens if you choose "Auto select"? (Edit: Restart the system after changing the settings.)

  • Kimmi81's avatar
    Kimmi81
    2 years ago

    @holger1405 It was (and is, because I put it back to that now that I know what's going on and I decided to play windowed anyway), but when playing TS3 the system didn’t automatically pick the Nvidia option.

  • puzzlezaddict's avatar
    puzzlezaddict
    Hero+
    2 years ago

    @Kimmi81  What about using auto-select in the Nvidia control panel and telling Windows to use the Nvidia card?  The setting is under Windows Settings > System > Display > Graphics settings; you'd click Browse and find the game (ts3w again) on the list, and choose the high-performance option.

  • Kimmi81's avatar
    Kimmi81
    2 years ago

    @puzzlezaddict That was the next thing I have tried (I had actually already found that myself, I was quite proud lol). This gets ignored by the system. In the sense that, while it holds (the preference is noted and saved), when starting the game, display still chooses the integrated card upon game start up. 

  • holger1405's avatar
    holger1405
    Hero+
    2 years ago

    @Kimmi81 


    Kimmi81 wrote:

    This gets ignored by the system. In the sense that, while it holds (the preference is noted and saved), when starting the game, display still chooses the integrated card upon game start up. 


    It still does not recognise the setting even if you reboot before playing?

  • Kimmi81's avatar
    Kimmi81
    2 years ago

    @holger1405 Nope.

    Even though the setting is saved like it should be (if I go back to check in display settings, it has the high-performance card assigned to TS3W.exe in settings), as I go back to the game in full-screen mode, the distortion is back, and the Nvidia GPU panel says the game (application) is running on the high-performance card, but still, no displays are connected to this GPU. Only when I go to the Nvidia control panel and change it so the display always uses the high-performance card, everything looks okay. 

    I'm okay with it, though. I'm getting used to right-click scrolling, which gives me the same options as edge scrolling, and I think I might even prefer windowed borderless now. And if I do wish to play the game in full-screen mode without distortion, I know what to do now.

    I'm willing to keep trying things and experimenting some more to help other players, though, so any more suggestions are still welcome. 

  • holger1405's avatar
    holger1405
    Hero+
    2 years ago

    @Kimmi81 

    I got that, my question is if you restarted the computer (a real Restart, not just shutting down and then starting it again.) after setting the global NVIDIA control panel setting to "Auto-select" and the game specific setting (ts3w.exe) to "high-performance NVIDIA processor" and before you played?
    (Both should be set in this way.)


    It can happen that such settings are not really set if the system is not restarted. (This shouldn't happen and is rare, but just to be safe.)

  • holger1405's avatar
    holger1405
    Hero+
    2 years ago

    @Kimmi81 

    OK, thanks for checking. But then there seems to be a clear configuration problem on this laptop.

    It might be a driver problem, but after clean reinstallation of the driver this seems rater unlikely.
    (You used DDU to reinstall both drivers, the Intel and the NVIDIA one?)

  • Kimmi81's avatar
    Kimmi81
    2 years ago

    I did. 

    I agree this might be a specific problem with this laptop. However, and this is probably my stubborn character, but I don't think I want to go through the trouble of sending this laptop back, getting a new one and setting everything up again for an issue I probably won't encounter again anyway. 🤷🏼‍♀️

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