Issues with High End computer (FPS)

Sep 19, 2018
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Hello!
Im currently having major issues with my PC. I bought a new PC last year, and it has been nothing but problems until now.

My build:
Processor: QuadCore Intel Core I7-7700K 4.5 GHz
Motherboard: Asus Strix Z270F Gaming
RAM: 16 GB Dual
GPU: Pci Express 3.0 Asus Rog STRIX GTX 1080 Gaming
Storage: SSD and HDD

My issue is that I have a really low FPS in-game. This goes for most of the games I play, especially CS:GO (the game I play the most). Everything with the game feels unsmooth as well, and I have FPS drops mostly all of the time. Sometimes it goes under 190 etc, and I can really feel it not being smooth at all. It spikes so much, instead of standing on 300 capped as it did before. I have no idea when this happend, but it must've been after I formated the PC a while back.

I have almost given up on trying to fix this, as I have been using so much time browsing YouTube/Google etc for fixes. Nothing I have tried has worked so far.

If you have a moment to try to help me, I would gladly appreciate it. I will also give my word on a little gift to the person who fixes my problem (yes, we live in 2018 - I am sure more people will help with their knowledge if its paid).

Have a nice day!
 
looks like you might be using integrated graphics

Integrated Graphics Processor- Intel® HD Graphics support
Multi-VGA output support : HDMI/DVI-D/DisplayPort 1.2 ports
- Supports HDMI with max. resolution 4096 x 2160 @ 24 Hz
- Supports DVI-D with max. resolution 1920 x 1200 @ 60 Hz
- Supports DisplayPort with max. resolution 4096 x 2304 @ 60 Hz *1
Maximum shared memory of 1024 MB (for iGPU exclusively)
Supports Intel® InTru™ 3D, Quick Sync Video, Clear Video HD Technology, Insider™
Supports up to 3 displays simultaneously
 

mahanddeem

Distinguished
Apr 30, 2007
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Your issues and disappointments are vague, more info needed. What games are you playing? CSGO is not a reliable benchmark or even a game that you can base your performance upon.
What windows and what drivers? What bios? Updated bios for the motherboard?
What cpu clock at turbo? Overclocked? Voltage? Temp? Cooler? PC airflow?
What psu? Could be malfunctioning
RAM speed? XMP on?
Vsync? Gsync?
Did you monitor parameters while gaming? Gpu usage? Temp? Clocks?
Did you run any benchmarks recently? Firestrike? Unigin? Superposition? What score do you get?
You need to work on the above areas. Or at least share these info.


 


How about start with the basics first like benchmarks and temp testing before recommending a full OS reinstall...

It's called troubleshooting, you dont just throw "reinstall windows" as the end all be all solution right out of the gate.
 
bs, and I will tell you why. a clean os install with only MS driver set, what they deem appropriate and getting it working IS basic troubleshooting. reading his response he's "tried everything" most likely meaning he messed even more stuff up. If this isn't hardware, it's software, start ruling stuff out. You do you.

like I said, get clean install and verify all your hardware working. then you can do your temps and junk. we want to start with a KNOWN WORKING system

if you install windows clean and it doesn't work out of the box then you most likely have hardware issues.
 


Yet he has reinstalled Windows multiple times already and issue remains so you just wasted every ones time.

Troubleshoot basics first. Always. I've been a Network/System Engineer for over 10 years. If I told my client to reinstall Windows every time there was an issue. I would have been out of a job years ago. You can test hardware without reinstalling Windows... reinstalling Windows is not a valid hardware test.

Anyways, not here to argue. To OP. Please run those benchmarks and temp monitoring and report back with finding so we can proceed with other troubleshooting.
 


Hahah right... You do you buddy. That's not what any real technicians do in the field. Just shows how inexperienced you really are.

You troubleshoot the issue. Not just throw re-installation as the first fix. #facts.

If you want to continue to argue this feel free to PM me. However, this is not the place to do it.
 

gasaraki

Distinguished
Jun 11, 2008
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19,665
I would listen to andro's recommendation, install hwinfo, monitor temps for the gpu and cpu. This is after you make sure you have the newest nvidia graphics drivers, make sure all 16GB of ram is seen by Windows, might want to see if there's chipset drivers for your board, etc.

Don't know what monitor you are using either.

Tell us the max temp hwinfo sees in the maximum column after you play your game.