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Ahmed Nofal

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About Ahmed Nofal

  • Birthday Dec 03, 1994

Contact Methods

  • Discord
    Having problems with my new PC

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Egypt
  • Interests
    Hacking and Table Tennis
  • Occupation
    A student at Faculty of Engineering - MAnsoura Universaity

System

  • CPU
    Intel Core i5 6400
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte H170-D3H
  • RAM
    Team Elite *gb
  • GPU
    Zotac GTX 1060
  • Case
    Miracle
  • Storage
    Seagate 2TB
  • PSU
    Cooler Master B500
  • Display(s)
    LG 24 Inch 1920x1080
  • Cooling
    No cooling
  • Keyboard
    Microsoft
  • Mouse
    Microsoft
  • Sound
    Fang
  • Operating System
    Windows 8.1

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Ahmed Nofal's Achievements

  1. I truly appreciate your swift and generous response, Eigenvektor. So correct me if I'm wrong I've learned from one of the videos at LTT and from some people experiences that VRR technologies help substantially smoothen the gaming experience, even at 60FPS or less. But whichever game I play, I do not see that happening, especially at around 60Hz. Yeah, that's right. Forspoken is not a well-optimized game. But even though, I find the same choppiness issue in every and each game I play, even "Godfall" which is the game I used to demonstrate what I see as true VRR. FreeSync Premium is already enabled on my OSD I capped Fortspoken to 60FPS to show the difference between 60FPS at Forspoken and 60FPS at Godfall. But unluckily there's a drastic difference between the 60FPS of both games. Kindly note that there're areas in the game that are less demanding and I can absolutely notice a remarkable improvement in the overall smoothness when FPS rises to 100+.
  2. Hello Everyone, So, whatever games I play on my PC, they look choppy even when FPS is above 60 FPS. Games on my PC look smooth only when FPS is around 120Hz and above should be due to the high FPS. I've followed every step found in the guides on YouTube and the online articles to enable G-Sync-Compatible, and I've tried two different monitors that support FreeSync Premium but the issue is much the same. I've also enabled the G-Sync Compatible Indicator from Nvidia Control Panel to be sure that it works for every game I play. The indicator shows up already on games but still, games look really choppy. Why would I say that games look choppy even while enabling G-Sync-Compatible? I made a video while I was gaming and limited the FPS to 60 FPS, then compared it to another video. Please watch these two videos and you'll notice the substantial difference between my PC and that other PC My Variable Refresh Rate True Variable Refresh Rate Here are my PC's Specs: CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 5600 GPU: GTX 1080Ti Founders Edition. RAM: 32 GB Hyper X Fury 3200MHz CL16 SSD: Crucial P3 1TB Monitor 1: Samsung Odyssey G5 1440p 144Hz FreeSync Premium Monitor Monitor 2: Dell Alienware AW2521HF 240Hz 1080p FreeSync Premium Monitor Windows version: Windows 10 Build 19045 Things I've tried: 1-Capping FPS using RivaTuner Statistics 4 frames behind my monitors max refresh rate 2-Connecting to a DisplayPort and Enabling G-Sync Compatible through Nvidia Control Panel 3-Enabling V-Sync through nvidia control panel If anybody knows anything about this issue. Kindly lend me some help. Thanks in advance.
  3. Hello Check that video from LinusTechTips This will give you the absolute final answer for what you're questioning And guess what, neither 1080p nor 4k monitors are giving you the nicest experience along with your very powerful graphics card
  4. Well, after a while... Now I see the problem. Nvidia Shadow Play was turned on and it's common that shadow play causes stutters for some situations. The second thing is my RAM. This was the core thing causing stutters. If I want to play at High, Ultra or Even medium graphics, I need to upgrade my RAMs to 12GB or 16 GB instead of 8GB. Because a game like Final Fantasy XV could easily take 11GB of RAM at High graphics. Now and again. it's clear like sun that these were the two core problems for my stuttering situation.
  5. Well, after a while... Now I see the problem. Nvidia Shadow Play was turned on and it's common that shadow play causes stutters for some situations. The second thing is my RAM. This was the core thing causing stutters. If I want to play at High, Ultra or Even medium graphics, I need to upgrade my RAMs to 12GB or 16 GB instead of 8GB. Because a game like Final Fantasy XV could easily take 11GB of RAM at High graphics. Now and again. it's clear like sun that these were the two core problems for my stuttering situation.
  6. Woah !!! Man, I managed to play Final Fantasy XV on the built in graphics of the processor without a single micro stutter! Now its clear like sun that the problem is related to the graphics card or the drivers of the graphics card! With the graphics card on, I suffered from really bad stutters and the game crashes after a while! and that happens for all games. That didn't happen with the build it graphics! Now I don't know what to do really. any suggestions? BTW, This is a picture of DPC Latency Checker about how my system is really stable with the built in graphics while playing Final Fantasy XV And this is a picture while using my Zotac graphics card:
  7. Woah !!! Man, I've managed to play Final Fantasy XV on the built in graphics of the processor without a single micro stutter! Now its clear like sun that the problem is related to the graphics card or the drivers of the graphics card! With the graphics card on, I suffered from really bad stutters and the game crashes after a while! and that happens for all games. That didn't happen with the build it graphics! Now I don't know what to do really. any suggestions? BTW, This is a picture of DPC Latency Checker about how my system is really stable with the built in graphics while playing Final Fantasy XV
  8. Woah !!! Man, I managed to play Final Fantasy XV on the built in graphics of the processor without a single micro stutter! Now its clear like sun that the problem is related to the graphics card or the drivers of the graphics card! With the graphics card on, I suffered from really bad stutters and the game crashes after a while! and that happens for all games. That didn't happen with the build it graphics! Now I don't know what to do really. any suggestions? BTW, This is a picture of DPC Latency Checker about how my system is really stable with the built in graphics while playing Final Fantasy XV
  9. Hello Fellows Firstly, here's my system build: Zotac GTX 1060 mini 6GB Intel core i5-6400 8GB RAM Team Elite Gigabyte H170-D3H Motherboard Cooler master B600 Power supply (600W) HDD Seagate 2TB 64MB Cache ST2000DM001 Windows 10 Pro Whenever I play games like Starcraft 2 for example (A well optimized game) at the highest graphics (My System can bear that easily), I suffer from stutters with a buzz sound forcing me to lower the graphics. Same for many other games. The same problem could happen even without gaming and during normal system use. The same games with very similar PC specs (or even lower specs) and same game versions run on other machines of my friends on the the highest graphics without stutters I've tried a software called DPC Latency Checker and this it told me that some drivers are running bad. But trying to format windows or disabling drivers didn't help No huge background tasks spiking the CPU No viruses on my machine RAM is not fully allocated and not even close Thermals for CPU and GPU are looking fine except for badly optimized games Tried to uninstall Graphics Drivers with a DDU but nothing has changed. My machine is new V-sync is always enabled. Even without V-Sync I suffer from very bad stutters
  10. I've tried what you said but that didn't help. If you know something else to tell me please do it.
  11. Hello Fellows Firstly, here's my system build: Zotac GTX 1060 mini 6GB Intel core i5-6400 8GB RAM Team Elite Gigabyte H170-D3H Motherboard Cooler master B600 Power supply (600W) HDD Seagate 2TB 64MB Cache ST2000DM001 Windows 10 Pro Whenever I play games like Starcraft 2 for example (A well optimized game) at the highest graphics (My System can bear that easily), I suffer from stutters with a buzz sound forcing me to lower the graphics. Same for many other games. The same problem could happen even without gaming and during normal system use. The same games with very similar PC specs (or even lower specs) and same game versions run on other machines of my friends on the the highest graphics without stutters I've tried a software called DPC Latency Checker and this it told me that some drivers are running bad No huge background tasks spiking the CPU No viruses on my machine RAM is not fully allocated and not even close Thermals for CPU and GPU are looking fine except for badly optimized games Tried to uninstall Graphics Drivers with a DDU but nothing has changed. My machine is new V-sync is always enabled. Even without V-Sync I suffer from very bad stutters
  12. I think I found the correct naming of my problem. It's a stutter in so many games with a buzz sound while stuttering. I'll start a new thread with that (y)
  13. Thank you again for your replies RyzenDoctor (y) Replying to your two posts, I suffer from stutters at every game even if the CPU is not maxed out but the GPU is. I know that I'm not updating many of my games to the latest versions but still, I play the latest version of Starcraft II at high graphics with some stuttering. I've played all the campaign of Titnafall 2 (Not updated) at high graphics with no stutters, then started another campaign and the game has become stuttering so much even at the lowest graphics with no reason. I've tried to use DDU and then install GPU drivers again but didn't help. Even Call of Duty Black Ops 3 stutters alot at high graphics(not updated) (GTX 1060 is supposed to run Black ops III at ultra graphics at average 80 FPS ) There's another thing, Whenever I play any game without V-sync, I suffer from bad stutters. One of the games crashed. I play Final Fantasy XV At Normal Graphics without hairworks option but with some stutters, and then reduced it to the lowest graphics, the GPU usage reduced a lot but it spikes sometimes and then the game stutters. Regarding to the picture or RAM CPU-ID, it was while I was opening Final Fantasy XV, this is the picture while idle CPU and opening only chrome and these are the information you requested about my system, playing Final Fantasy XV at lowest graphics without hairworks. It wasn't stuttering at all. but switching to the avg graphics, I suffered from so bad stutters and FPS drops. I wonder why this time the stutters were unbearable. It could be that the graphical environment I was playing at was peaking my GPU and CPU. This video is at the idle state while opening only chrome. This is while playing at the lowest graphics then switched to the average graphics. Idle.mp4
  14. Thank you for your good reply, RyzenDoctor First of all this is a screenshot of my system while playing Final Fantasy XV at normal Graphics. Each hardware looks working properly without excessive temperatures. My system is supposed to run this game without stutters and thats what I figured out on youtube. There're often no FPS Drops. It stays at steady 60 FPS but suffers from non reasonable stutters. When my GPU maxes out but my CPU doesn't, I still suffer from stutters. I always close everything on windows before playing games. RAM is not fully allocated. My PC doesn't include viruses after the last scan This is a screenshot of my CPU-ID RAM configuration while playing Final Fantasy XV: This is My AIDA64 Stress Test Report: Report.txt If you found something interesting please feed me
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