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  1. a community dedicated to finding optimal settings in video games for the best combination of visuals & performance

  2. Go under "Processor Power Management" in the dropdowns, select "Maximum Processor State", and set both battery and plugged in to 99%. This works on Dell, Acer, and probably other brands that run Intel CPUs.

  3. Here are the settings I have set currently: Processor performance increase threshold - 30% Processor performance core parking min cores - 13% Processor performance decrease threshold - 20% Processor performance core parking concurrency threshold - 95% Processor energy performance preference policy - 20% Allow throttle states - off.

  4. Enable XMP for your RAM in BIOS. Change Windows power plan to High performance. Under graphics settings in Windows add each games .exe and set it to high performance, as well. Turn on game mode in Windows. Your BIOS may or may not have a game mode you can turn on, as well.

  5. Experiment, find out the best clock speed for YOUR laptop. Mine is different. Plus, use a cooling pad. It did wonders to my laptop's cooling. Use Control Panel for clock speeds. Don't use ThrottleStop. To see your CPU Clock, download MSI Afterburner and monitor it. Mine shows, 2411MHz which is 2.4GHz. Hope this Helps!

  6. You want your GPU to be maxing its usage so it can pump out frames. That is the reason why your fps is really high. If you GPU is not at 99%, it could mean that your CPU is bottle-necking your GPU or the way the game was designed (aka source engine games). CPU at 100% on the other hand...not good :P

  7. The general rule is upgrading the GPU to newer and more powerful version is the most consistent and commonly recommended way to increase your FPS. Check your PSU and its rated wattages. Getting a high-end GPU is useless if your PSU cannot supply the power needed to your components.

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