09-29-2024 06:50 AM
Hello everyone, I currently have an ASUS Rog Strix G16 and I am having suttering problems or fps suddenly drop in a game called Far Cry 6 but it does not happen to me in Red Dead Redemption 2. I currently have the BIOS 328V and the Nvidia driver 560.94, I would like to know what Nvdia driver they have or if I go back to a previous one?
Or how could I solve this, it only happens to me in Far cry 6, how do they have the configuration in the nvidia control panel, what version of nvdia driver do they have, do they have vertical synchronization disabled?
My laptop has the following specifications:
13th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-13650HX 2.60 GHz
Ram 16GB 4800MHz
RTX 4060
09-29-2024 09:11 AM
The problem is not so much in the driver's version its depend what settings you use how you set the settings in Nvidia control panel and Nvidia inspector also at what frequency work the CPU and GPU what are the % usage , how many watts they use also did you use frame generation and dlss another thing is did your laptop overheating there are so much things that can make a problem
For example i use this graph to check how my laptop work look in the top corner
I haved the same laptop like your's and when i played this game it work perfect so your laptop need optimization
09-29-2024 10:38 AM
Even if I have another model, ROX X13 with the RTX 4060, the label that is below the keyboard says: NVidia GEForx RTX "STUDIO". Shouldn´t´we use the Studio Version instead of Gaming Drivers???? In fact, when unboxed the STUDIO version is installed.
09-29-2024 05:49 PM
Use gaming drivers no studio driver's this is gaming laptop so do not use studio drivers
Go in the official website and Download the lates Game Ready driver's if this dont fix the problem you must search it somewhere else and try to do some optimizations
10-03-2024 01:14 PM
How the fk u gettin these temps? mine 13650HX in G16 cranks in to 90 degree - 95 allways... and i have clean heatsinks, good position etc... every single fuking game is getting that hot.
10-13-2024 12:02 PM
It's funny... that used to happen to me before. Nowadays, almost a year into using my rig (I have i9-13980HX), I don’t notice it anymore. I usually game between 70-80°C, and sometimes hit 90°C during specific moments.
Try keeping an eye on temps... sometimes the game demands more from the CPU in the inizialitation, but eventually it 'stabilizes.'
Play around with the settings... for Red Dead Redemption 2, I made some adjustments, reducing details that seemed unnecessary (because I wasn’t going to notice them during gameplay anyway xD) and got temperatures around 70-75°C while still having good visuals overall.
Consider sacrificing a bit of FXAA until you reach a point where you’re like, 'Okay, this looks good, I don’t need more,' and balance out the use of DLSS. Keep in mind that the more frames you generate at more resolution, the more strain you’ll put on both the CPU and GPU.
Also, something that really put me at ease: these CPUs are built to handle extreme conditions... if they reach their limit, they’ll just trigger their internal blockers and shut everything down before damaging your motherboard. Remember, the temperature readings you see aren’t the overall CPU temperature—it’s just the highest momentary spike from a single core at any given time.
Besides that, I recommend using a cooling pad. And make sure to get your rig cleaned and the thermal paste replaced at least once a year.
Trust me, a year will go by, and you won’t even care about the temperature anymore xD. Around this time last year, I made a post about the same thing in this space.
10-13-2024 11:43 AM
Hey! I’m not sure if you’ve found a solution by now. I have an ASUS Rog Strix G16 (CPU: i9-13980HX, GPU: RTX 4070 Laptop), and I had performance issues AFTER UPDATING THE NVIDIA DRIVERS TO THE LATEST ONES... and this after having good performance before hahaha... What I did to fix it was downgrade Nvidia to the most stable driver released this year, which is 552.44.
I posted this in one of the GeForce Game Ready forums that pop up every time they release an update... specifically the one about 561.09, which was my last attempt at updating: 'What I noticed was that 561.09 forced my screen to lower its refresh rate from 165.02 Hz to 60.01 Hz... and this issue affected all games, drastically reducing performance in Red Dead Redemption 2 and Cyberpunk 2077... The most pathetic part is that even 2D sprite-based games were affected...'
Since then, What I do is keep the 552.44 installer on my computer... and every time Nvidia screws up with their drivers, I simply go back to the one that has given me the fewest problems.
10-19-2024 12:25 PM
I tried to install these drivers but they never install. I've tried everything, safe mode, DDU, turning off automatic driver updates, cutting the internet out for the update. The only ones that will actually install are the ones from the asus rog strix g16 driver page. Both of those versions just cause my games and apps to crash constantly. This is one of the only drivers that will actually install without giving me and errors. Graphic_DCH_ROG_NVIDIA_J_V31.0.15.4624_36449 (1).exe
10-19-2024 09:49 PM
How strange. At least for me, the Nvidia drivers don’t install automatically, not without my permission. And I haven’t had any issues with this small downgrade operation.
Usually, I just download the drivers that come from Windows Update and MyASUS... not direct from the asus rog strix g16 driver page. As for Nvidia, like I mentioned, I was having stability issues with the latest ones, so what I did was search for the specific drivers on the website.
"https://www.nvidia.com/download/driverResults.aspx/224483/en-us/". The great thing is that you don't even have to uninstall anything... when you install this driver, it will overwrite the more recent ones.
10-20-2024 10:02 PM
I get this every time. This is the file from the link you provided.