Thank you, I was so happy to have some more things to try out here! If that doesn't help, try also disabling fullscreen optimizations in the properties of the game's exe file. Name (database): NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 ĭo you have access to the AMD integrated graphics control panel? Try searching there for v-sync settings and turn them on. GPU: 5 GPU Memory: 1 CPU: 4 RAM: 4 CPU Speed: 2895 Threading: 3 Name (database): GeForce GTX 480 Ĭhipset: Vendor: 10de, Device: 1f15, Board: 1e211043, Chipset: 00a1ĭriver: nvldumd.dll, Version: 31., GUID: D7B71E3E-5C55-11CF-CB7D-2E3E0EC2D235ĭevice Config BEFORE graphics card was "recognized": GPU: 5 GPU Memory: 4 CPU: 4 RAM: 4 CPU Speed: 2895 Threading: 3Īdjusted CPU: 3460 RAM: 15789 Adjusted RAM: 15277 Cores: 16īrand: AMD Ryzen 7 4800H with Radeon Graphics In case this is relevant, here's the thing from my device config file AFTER the graphics card was "recognized": I am not quite yet ready to give up on fixing the screen tearing, though.Īny other reason for the screen tearing besides FPS? I have my old favorite Nvidia drivers backed up on another drive and if there's nothing else for me to try, I might try that next, but it's a whole thing so I've been putting it off. If I have to run this windowed I will, because for the most part, I don't notice screen tearing that way, though it's not any smoother than my very old, non-gaming laptop is in windowed mode so it still feels not quite right). I've been researching this everywhere and tried everything that wasn't too invasive. This morning I did the trick of getting my graphics card "recognized" the way Igazor showed me before, but still the screen tearing. I've also tried capping it at 59 and 58, just to be sure. My game is definitely not going over 60 fps. In Windows and in Nvidia CP I set the game to use the Nvidia GPU so that the settings should "take". I even used the Nvidia Profile Inspector to force vsync and limit the FPS, just in case. I did the things, updated my Nvidia driver, set the FPS, vsync on, triple buffering on (I don't remember my previous Nvidia settings beyond that). I can deal with doing that (though I wish I didn't have to). The darkness can be sort of fixed by changing resolution and then changing it back, most of the time. And the game is really dark, like it's perpetual dusk, except its on the main menu and UI too. it rolls like a wave from bottom to top of the screen as I move the camera around. I didn't have a chance to do that, because Windows wanted to do a second round of updates a few hours later, I guess to get it all the way current, and that's when "disaster" struck. No issues that I could see, though I looked forward to bringing in my old options file to get my settings just right. When I first set up the laptop and let it do the first round of Windows updates, the game looked really good. I'm naive that way.īut Windows updates and drivers, though. Now, I'm very grateful to have had somebody sell me a decent gaming laptop that is very similar to my deceased laptop, and I honestly thought I would be able to jump right in. Basically, I eventually found the Nvidia driver verson I liked and never updated it, never changed the settings, and it was great. Like all Khan Academy offerings, all Duck Duck Moose apps are now 100% free, without ads or subscriptions.I must have been exceptionally blessed with my previous (now deceased) laptop, because it ran Sims 3 like a dream, to the extent that I didn't fully believe there were that many problems with the game, weird buggy things aside. Duck Duck Moose is now part of the Khan Academy family. Khan Academy is a nonprofit with a mission to provide a free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere. Founded in 2008, the company has created 21 top-selling titles and has received 21 Parents’ Choice Awards, 18 Children’s Technology Review Awards, 12 Tech with Kids’ Best Pick App Awards, and a KAPi award for “Best Children’s App” at the International Consumer Electronics Show. TOOLS: 22 stickers, 10 frames and 11 photo filtersĭuck Duck Moose, an award-winning creator of educational mobile apps for families, is a passionate team of engineers, artists, designers, and educators. NOTE: For adults, check out our “ChatterPix” app for more fun and sharing via email and social media. Simply take a photo, draw a line to make a mouth, and record your voice.Ĭreate ChatterPix with friends and family as silly greetings, playful messages, creative cards, or even fancy book reports. Let’s ChatterPix! Chatterpix Kids can make anything talk - pets, books, doodles, and more.
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