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Warzone 2 - LOW fps

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Hello, Can I have a question please?

My PC setup is:
MSI RTX 4070 Ti Gaming X Trio
Ryzen 7 5800X
RAM Kingston 2x16GB DDR4 3200MHz
MB MSI MPG X570 GAMING EDGE WI-FI
PSU SilentiumPC Supremo FM2, 80+ Gold, modular, 750W
CASE MSI MAG VAMPIRIC 010
SSD Samsung 970 EVO PLUS, 500GB, M.2 – 2280
HDD WD Blue WD10EZEX, 3,5" SATAIII, 64MB - 1TB

With this setup, I’m able to get around 120 FPS only on LOW setting. I've seen several videos with the same/or worse setup getting around 150 fps on HIGH setting. In the past, I had the same problem and only thing that helped me was to reinstall the Windows and I had around 170fps on LOW setting after that, but now it's bad again.. But I don't want to reinstall the windows every month to keep the performance OK. Can you please help me? What should be the problem?

Edit: Just for info - Graphics drivers are up to date, CPU chipset drivers are up to date, BIOS version is up to date

Thank you so much for any help!
Zema
 
So other can assist let get a speccy report.

Do not forget to post the make and model of the PSU if this is a desktop.

Download then run Speccy (free) and post the resultant url for us, details here, this will provide us with information about your computer hardware + any software that you have installed that may explain the present issue/s.

To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:

In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.

In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.

Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.
 
Junk tier power supply with a 4070Ti would certainly cause some issues.

You need at least a 900W 80+ Gold PSU from a reputable manufacturer (Seasonic, Corsair).

A 10 year warranty is usually a good sign of a quality unit.

Here's a reference for PSU requirement by GPU.



It's possible this isn't your issue, but the Supremo line was marked as Tier -E (Avoid) on the power supply ranking list we use - I would replace it before it causes actual damage.
 
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So other can assist let get a speccy report.

Do not forget to post the make and model of the PSU if this is a desktop.

Download then run Speccy (free) and post the resultant url for us, details here, this will provide us with information about your computer hardware + any software that you have installed that may explain the present issue/s.

To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:

In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.

In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.

Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.
Thank you for your answer, speccy link is here --> http://speccy.piriform.com/results/IpFRgUJhbfnn2z8MIDBMe3e
 
You've paired a criminally underpowered power supply with a power hungry card and a high performance power plan. Your first issue to sort out is the PSU as I detailed in post #3.

This is my laundry list, it's a good starting point - but in your case even if it does fix the issue you SHOULD replace that power supply before it causes damage:


1. Try running the following programs, also try to keep at least 25-30% of your disks as free space.

Run Disk Cleanup (check all the boxes) this will delete things such as your recycling bin, so make sure you don't have any files you want to keep.

Run Defragment and Optimize Drives, run this on your drives.



These will free up some space, but you may need to relocate/delete files to reach the suggested free space.



2. Disable any overclocking or changes to power/performance settings

Undo any overclocking you may have done (if any)

Settings > System > Power and sleep > Additional power settings
Make sure your power plan is set to balanced, high performance/ultimate performance is only beneficial on gaming laptops where it needs that extra boost.


3. Check for Operating System Corruption

Right click on the Windows logo in the bottom left and select Windows Powershell (Admin)
Run these three commands separately:

sfc /scannow

Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth

Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth


These will take a while to run, do not close out of Powershell while they are running, if one fails then move onto the next and then loop back around.

Note: It doesn't hurt to make a system backup before you make all these changes, save any important files of folders. While these changes shouldn't cause any issues, better to be safe than sorry.


4. Unplug unnecessary devices.

If you have a gamepad, extra monitor, external hard drive/flash drive, or anything that is not essential to using the computer plugged in, unplug it.


Once you have completed all of these tasks, restart it (using the restart option in the power menu) and re-test.
 
You've paired a criminally underpowered power supply with a power hungry card and a high performance power plan. Your first issue to sort out is the PSU as I detailed in post #3.

This is my laundry list, it's a good starting point - but in your case even if it does fix the issue you SHOULD replace that power supply before it causes damage:


1. Try running the following programs, also try to keep at least 25-30% of your disks as free space.

Run Disk Cleanup (check all the boxes) this will delete things such as your recycling bin, so make sure you don't have any files you want to keep.

Run Defragment and Optimize Drives, run this on your drives.



These will free up some space, but you may need to relocate/delete files to reach the suggested free space.



2. Disable any overclocking or changes to power/performance settings

Undo any overclocking you may have done (if any)

Settings > System > Power and sleep > Additional power settings
Make sure your power plan is set to balanced, high performance/ultimate performance is only beneficial on gaming laptops where it needs that extra boost.


3. Check for Operating System Corruption

Right click on the Windows logo in the bottom left and select Windows Powershell (Admin)
Run these three commands separately:

sfc /scannow

Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth

Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth


These will take a while to run, do not close out of Powershell while they are running, if one fails then move onto the next and then loop back around.

Note: It doesn't hurt to make a system backup before you make all these changes, save any important files of folders. While these changes shouldn't cause any issues, better to be safe than sorry.


4. Unplug unnecessary devices.

If you have a gamepad, extra monitor, external hard drive/flash drive, or anything that is not essential to using the computer plugged in, unplug it.


Once you have completed all of these tasks, restart it (using the restart option in the power menu) and re-test.
Hello Pyro,

Thank you for your advices.
I ordered a new PSU yesterday and I will have it on Tuesday. I ordered Seasonic Focus Plus - 1000W 80 Plus Gold.

Regarding your points to try.. I've done everything and everything went smoothly. No problems were found.
But unofrtunately, the performance hasn't changed.

I've tried to put all setting on max and I get aroud 100 fps only. Then I change it to lowest possible setting and I get around 120 fps (just a note - I play on 1440p). I don't know, maybe this hardware is not strong enough to get more FPS, but it seemse weird for me.

When you check this YT video -->
A guy has his setting on max and he get around 140-150 fps with this setup:

Case: Cooler Master MasterCase H500
Motherboard: Msi B550 Tomahawk
CPU: Amd Ryzen 7 5700X overclocked to 4.7 Ghz Cpu
Cooler: Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4
Ram: 32 gb Kingston Hyperx Predator 3600 mhz
Vga: Nvidia Geforce RTX 4070 TI MSI GAMING X TRIO
SSD: Kingston 3K Hyperx 120 gb ''2.5'' && Kingston A400 480 gb && 512GB Gigabyte AORUS RGB SSD M.2 && Western Digital 500GB M.2 NVMe SN850 PSU: EVGA G+ 650W

How is that possible? These components are not better than mine. Could it be the 3600mhz RAM, or overclocked CPU?
I really don't know what, but something must be wrong.

Thank you in advace for your help.
Jan.
 
You need to enable XMP so that your CPU gets the benefit of the RAMs 3200MHz speed.

Word of caution, you should never compare other peoples hardware performance with that of your own, there are just too many variables involved, internet speed, cluttered storage devices, poorly cooled hardware, and inefficient power source to name just a few.
 
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