Best Gothic 1 Remake graphics settings for no lag and max FPS
Gothic 1 Remake is now available on PC and consoles, and it recreates the classic Valley of the Mines in a modernized way. However, you’ll need to make some tweaks if you’re on PC to get the best possible results. I have already encountered stutters, but thankfully, changing a few settings solved the problem. Let’s find out how to get the best possible results on your system and avoid lags at all costs. Best Gothic 1 Remake graphics settingshttps://embeds.beehiiv.com/a8d62108-86ed-4039-bf49-44877ba62c15 Before I dive deep into the settings, here’s my current setup. 32 GB of DDR4 RAM AMD Ryzen 7 5700X AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT 16 GB Image via THQ Nordic My system requirements are comfortably over the recommended specifications. However, I still encountered stutters in a few areas. Thankfully, the following settings will help you enjoy the best gameplay. Furthermore, I have focused the settings to ensure that devices on the lower end of the power curve can run Gothic 1 Remake. If your system is strong and meets the recommended settings, chances are that you won’t need to make many changes. Display mode: Fullscreen Resolution: Go with the native resolution of your monitor VSync: Turn this on if you’re suffering stutters. Enabling VSync will limit the FPS, but the results would be smoother. Frame rate limit: 60 FPS is a sweet spot for now. This is an RPG, where you truly don’t need to go above 60 FPS as long as there are no fluctuations. Gamma: 2.2 Field of View: 75 Motion Blur Intensity: 0 (I hate Motion Blur) Bloom Intensity: 100 Depth of Field Intensity: 100 Ambient Occlusion Intensity: 100 Sharpening Intensity: 100 (Reduce this if you encounter lags) Saturation: Default Contrast: Default Brightness: Default Upscaler: Off (If you’re getting less than sufficient frames, turn this on. This will reduce the visual fidelity to some extent, but the gameplay will improve significantly). Quality Preset: Custom View Distance Quality: Medium Anti-Aliasing Quality: Medium Shadow Quality: Low (spending GPU resources on shadows makes little sense) Reflection Quality: Low (Same logic as Shadow Quality) Post-processing Quality: Medium Texture Quality: Medium Effects Quality: Medium Foliage Quality: Low Shading Quality: Medium Landscape Quality: Low 0 The post Best Gothic 1 Remake graphics settings for no lag and max FPS appeared first on Destructoid.
Let’s find out how to get the best possible results on your system and avoid lags at all costs.
- 32 GB of DDR4 RAM
- AMD Ryzen 7 5700X
- AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT 16 GB
Image via THQ Nordic My system requirements are comfortably over the recommended specifications. However, I still encountered stutters in a few areas. Thankfully, the following settings will help you enjoy the best gameplay. Furthermore, I have focused the settings to ensure that devices on the lower end of the power curve can run Gothic 1 Remake. If your system is strong and meets the recommended settings, chances are that you won’t need to make many changes. - Display mode: Fullscreen
- Resolution: Go with the native resolution of your monitor
- VSync: Turn this on if you’re suffering stutters. Enabling VSync will limit the FPS, but the results would be smoother.
- Frame rate limit: 60 FPS is a sweet spot for now. This is an RPG, where you truly don’t need to go above 60 FPS as long as there are no fluctuations.
- Gamma: 2.2
- Field of View: 75
- Motion Blur Intensity: 0 (I hate Motion Blur)
- Bloom Intensity: 100
- Depth of Field Intensity: 100
- Ambient Occlusion Intensity: 100
- Sharpening Intensity: 100 (Reduce this if you encounter lags)
- Saturation: Default
- Contrast: Default
- Brightness: Default
- Upscaler: Off (If you’re getting less than sufficient frames, turn this on. This will reduce the visual fidelity to some extent, but the gameplay will improve significantly).
- Quality Preset: Custom
- View Distance Quality: Medium
- Anti-Aliasing Quality: Medium
- Shadow Quality: Low (spending GPU resources on shadows makes little sense)
- Reflection Quality: Low (Same logic as Shadow Quality)
- Post-processing Quality: Medium
- Texture Quality: Medium
- Effects Quality: Medium
- Foliage Quality: Low
- Shading Quality: Medium
- Landscape Quality: Low
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