Escape From Tarkov Settings Guide
2021年5月14日Download here: http://gg.gg/ulavm
Escape From Tarkov streamer settings you ask? There is a section towards the end of the guide that includes a few of the popular streamer’s settings. Check that out if your interested in Sequisha, Deadly Slob, Klean, Smoke or Kotton’s Escape from Tarkov settings.
Patch 0.12.5 for Escape From Tarkov brought PostFX settings into the game. It’s a new tab in the options menu that allows you to finely tune post processing effects applied to the game’s visuals. It makes the game prettier, but also can give you an advantage by affecting PvP visibility. If you’re wondering how to get that edge in a life or death situation, this guide will show you the best PostFX settings for PvP visibility in Tarkov.
First of all, let’s break down what each of the sliders and options does:
*Brightness – This one basically determines the balance between black and white. Put it too high, and white will be searing while black will be gray. Put it too low and black will turn pitch dark, while white will be dimmed significantly.
*Saturation – This one determines the strenght of colors. The higher it is, the more vibrant they’ll all be. If pulled all the way down, everything will kind of blend together in a familiar Call of Duty tone.
*Clarity – This one seems to add highlights to objects, making them more distinct against the background.
*Colorfulness – As far as I can see, this one does the same thing as saturation.
*Luma Sharpen – This one gives increases the strength of the lightning without washing out the colors too much.
*Adaptive Sharpen – Sharpens the textures, kind of like the effect you get when you take painkillers in the game.
*Color Grading – Applies various filters to the entire image. Extensive testing will show whether any of these provides any advantage.
*Colorblind mode – Each of these makes the game easier to read for people with particular types of color blindness. As far as advantage to others, the same applies as above.Best PostFX settings
With that out of the way, here are the settings we recommend. They presume you’re not using any color grading filter or colorblind mode.
*Brightness – 20 on daytime maps, as high as you can handle on night maps
*Saturation – Between 15 and 25
*Clarity – Around 50
*Colorfulness – Around 30
*Luma Sharpen – Between 40 and 50
*Adaptive Sharpen – Between 30 and 40
♤Step 3 In game settings! Now use the exe to open your game, you’ll know this was done correctly because you’ll need to click next to login first, then you’ll be at your main menu. Click the gears in the bottom right for your settings for Tarkov. Click the graphics tab. Uncheck the boxes at the bottom, leaving only the ’ssaa’ option selected. If you don’t have your volume up when playing Escape from Tarkov, you will have a bad time playing the game. It is highly recommended that you utilize the highest volume setting as you.
If course, there’s no one true solution here. It’s all individual and depends on your eyesight, so we recommend you experiment with the settings and find the ones that you like the most.Nvidia game filter settings
Nvidia game filters are working with Tarkov again, and they might be a better choice than the newly-added PostFX settings. We find that the Gamma slider in Nvidia’s filters helps more than PostFX’ brightness. If you’re going to stick with that, here’s what we recommend (based on Worrun’s setup):
*Color:
*Tint Color – 0%
*Tint Intensity – 0%
*Temperature – 0
*Vibrance – 70
*Sharpen:
*Sharpen – 70%
*Ignore Film Grain – 15%
*Brightness/Contrast:
*Exposure – 0%
*Contrast – 6%
*Highlights – 21%
*Shadows – 46%
*Gamma – As high as you like
by ZeroPointZero_
TL;DR: Buy a better PC Kappa
Greetings, fellow cheek dividers and cheeki breekis! I’ve seen a lot of players struggling to maximize their framerate in this game, even with pretty beastly rigs. I’ve helped a few, but I think a guide on how to get the best performance out of your machine (especially in the current beta versions of EFT, which are not very optimized) would be appreciated by everyone. Let’s get into it.
*Patch 0.12.5 for Escape From Tarkov brought PostFX settings into the game. It’s a new tab in the options menu that allows you to finely tune post processing effects applied to the game’s visuals. It makes the game prettier, but also can give you an advantage by affecting PvP visibility.
*From here, each of the individual graphic options within Escape from Tarkov’s Video Settings menu, will be turned down to their lowest/off setting and benchmarked again, comparing it to the baseline, in order to determine how it influences performance.
DISCLAIMER: Use any and all of these tweaks at your own risk. If you don’t know what you’re doing, or are even a bit unsure, ask someone who does know. Don’t ruin your $1000 PC because you were too proud to admit you didn’t even know how to go into the BIOS!
Caveat: I only have AMD systems, so unfortunately for Intel and nVIDIA users, I won’t have many tips specific to your hardware – however, general tips (and there will be many) will apply to you as well.
Test System Configurations
System 1 – Average Tier:
CPU: AMD FX-8350 Black Edition (4 cores, 8 threads) @ 4.0 GHz (underclocked from 4.2 GHz and undervolted from ~1.45 V to ~1.3 V)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition (2 GB GDDR5 VRAM, 1200 MHz VRAM clock, 1000 MHz GPU clock)
RAM: Corsair 32 GB (4×8 GB) DDR3 1333 MHz (XMP enabled: 1666 MHz) [16 GB would have near-identical performance]
PSU: 1000 W, 80+ Gold (Corsair)
Storage: 500 GB generic SSD (SATA)
Monitor: Generic 1680×1050 @ 60 Hz
System 2 – Above Average Tier:Escape From Tarkov Starter Guide
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3600 (6 cores, 12 threads) @ 4.2 GHz (stock core configuration, Infinity Fabric (memory controller) overclocked to 1600 MHz to match RAM)
GPU: AMD RX 5700 XT Sapphire Pulse (8 GB GDDR6 VRAM, 1750 MHz VRAM clock, 1815 MHz GPU clock)
RAM: G.SKILL 16 GB (2×8 GB) DDR4 3200 MHz (XMP enabled: 3200 MHz, CL 14)
PSU: 1000 W, 80+ Gold (Corsair)
Storage: 250 GB Samsung 970 EVO PRO SSD (NVME M.2)
Monitor: LG-24GL600F-B 1920×1080 @ 144 Hz
Monitoring/Performance Logging Tools
1) The “fps 1” and “fps 2” command. Use the “~” key to open the console, then type the command to enable it. Type “fps 0” to disable.
2) Radeon Performance Overlay (default shortcut: CTRL+SHIFT+O) [nVidia GeForce Experience has a similar in-game overlay]
3) CPU-Z and Ryzen Master (for CPU activity monitoring and tweaking) [Also Ryzen DRAM Calculator for RAM tweaking] [Intel does not have an equivalent to Ryzen Master, but CPU-Z is generic]
4) MSI Afterburner and RivaTuner Statistics Server (RTSS) (for GPU activity monitoring and manual fan curve adjustment)
Note: Monitoring applications that require low-level system access (i.e. need to read your hardware sensors) are sometimes identified by BattleEye as potentially dangerous applications, and will be forcefully shut down when you launch the game. This is not an application that is disallowed by BSG, and your access to the game will not be revoked (the “b” word cannot be uttered here) – it will just be closed when you launch the game, and you will have to re-launch it after you open the game. There is a workaround for this with MSI Afterburner – under Enable low-level hardware access interface, change this to “kernel mode”. Then MSI Afterburner/RTSS will work ingame no issues. (thanks, /u/Splintert !)
Pre-game settings and tips
1) Update! Make sure you’re running the latest Windows version, and ensure that your BIOS, chipset drivers, sound drivers, GPU drivers, Monitor drivers and peripheral (mouse/keyboard/headphones etc) drivers are installed.
1.1) When installing a new GPU driver, make sure to fully uninstall any older driver. This is called a “clean install“, and can sometimes be an option in the driver installation menu. If it’s not, make sure to manually uninstall the older driver. Use DDU (Display Driver Uninstaller) for this – the fully manual way is also possible, but much slower (reboot in safe mode, uninstall, reboot in safe mode, install, reboot in normal mode).
2) Ensure that your PSU can handle the total power draw of your system hardware. A 350 W PSU is probably not enough. A 500 W one would be the minimum, with 750+ W being preferrable (the less power that is drawn from the PSU, the more efficient it is, unless if you draw less than half of its max rated wattage).
2.1) Ensure that your motherboard VRMs (the chips/capacitors/mosfets that handle power delivery to the CPU) are adequate for the CPU you are using. The cheaper (and older) your motherboard (in comparison to the age of the CPU), the more likely it is that your CPU is not adequately powered by the motherboard. Heavy in-game stutters (that happen at semi-regular intervals, different from the stutters the game gets because of optimization issues) are a tell-tale sign of VRM overheating that results in the CPU being underclocked heavily. I personally had this problem with System #1, which is why I underclocked and undervolted the CPU. Once I did that, the stutters I mentioned before disappeared completely. That said, do not mess with your CPU settings if you don’t know what you are doing!
3) Ensure your RAM DIMMs (if you have more than 1) are set in a dual-channel configuration (meaning that the DIMMs should be installed in alternating slots on the motherboard, if it has more than 2 slots).
3.1) Ensure that your RAM has its best rated XMP (Extreme Memory Profile, essentially RAM overclocking) enabled. It is very often that I see people having bought very fast RAM, but without the XMP enabled, it is much, much slower than advertised. This is because the default (JEDEC) profile of the RAM maxes out at 2400 MHz – so if the RAM vendor advertises a speed over that, you need to enable the XMP, or your RAM will not be utilized to its max potential. Here’s a nice guide by Corsair on how to overclock your RAM. All that said, make sure not to enable an XMP that is above what your vendor has rated the DIMMs for. That can cause all sorts of issues. If you’re unsure, either don’t mess with it, or ask someone who knows!
3.2) [Ryzen-specific] Ryzen processors like fast RAM a lot, much more than Intel processors (that’s not to say fast RAM is bad for Intel CPUs, of course – quite the contrary). To utilize the fast ram as efficiently as possible, the memory controller of the system (the chip that handles read and write operations of the RAM) must be running at a speed that’s as close as possible to the speed of the RAM. If it’s slower, some of the potential of the RAM is wasted. If it’s faster, the controller is overstressed for no reason. The memory controller was located on the motherboard on older systems, but the Ryzen processors have it integrated on the CPU – it’s known as the “Infinity Fabric” (henceforth “IF”). To make sure that your IF uses your RAM to the max, its speed (in MHz) should be equal to half of the max speed of your RAM, in MHz. So, if you have two DIMMs of DDR4 3200 MHz RAM, half of that is 1600 MHz. Ensure that your IF is running at 1600 MHz, and you’re golden. You can see the IF clockspeed in Ryzen Master, in the “Fabric Clock” field. If your RAM is running at 3200 MHz max, then the IF should clock up to 1600 MHz on its own with no action required. If not, or if your RAM is faster, you’ll need to manually tweak it. You can do this in Ryzen Master. Here’s a guide by AMD.
4) Ensure that your system is properly ventilated, free of dust/obstructions, and does not thermally throttle. If your system performs well for a while after startup but then loses a lot of performance, or if it does better in the winter than in the summer, then you’re likely a victim of thermal throttling. PC components cannot handle extreme amounts of heat, but they generate a lot of it. If it is not dissipated in a timely fashion, performance degrades heavily – the system might even perform an emergency shutdown to prevent thermal damage to the sensitive electronics. Generally, if the system is clean of dust, free of obstructions (i.e. no large objects in front of air intakes), and its fans are running properly, you should have no problems. Otherwise, amend these issues. Check CPU and GPU temperatures with MSI Afterburner (link above).
5) Your hardware should be set to “Maximum Performance” mode in the Windows Power settings. Go to “Power Options”, and see which power plan is enabled. Make sure to click the “Show additional plans” option, if it’s available. Enable either the “High Performance” plan or the “AMD Ryzen High Performance” [Ryzen-specific] plan. If this setting isn’t enabled, your components will draw less power, so the system will be more power-efficient. However, it will also not be able to perform as well as it could. Note that a higher power draw results in more heat generated, so make sure point #4 is taken care of first.
6) Disable background applications that might be using the CPU and/or GPU before playing EFT. Use the Task Manager to check which apps might be “misbehaving” in this way, and either disable or uninstall them. Antivirus software are notorious hogs of the CPU, so create an exception in your antivirus for EFT, so it’s not monitored in real-time by your antivirus.
7) Make sure the game is installed on a Solid-State Drive, if you have one. If you don’t, go buy one. Seriously, this makes a big difference – not just for EFT, but for general PC usage. Buy one!
8) Clearing the game cache or verifying the integrity of the game’s files can occasionally fix some issues. You can do this from the game launcher. At the top right, under your username, there is an arrow. Click that, and you’ll get a menu. There, you can find the “Integrity Check” and “Clear Cache” options. Use them if you are experiencing an error you can’t seem to get past.
8.1) On the subject of the game launcher, if you experience a bug, make sure to submit a bug report through the launcher. The devs can’t test all system configurations, so bugs will get through quality testing all the time. Get screenshots, record videos, type out an explanation, submit the log files, do everything you can to help the devs isolate and repair the issue. Making a Reddit post might help, or it might not. Submitting a bug report will help, however.
9) Go to the installation path of Escape from Tarkov (right-click the launcher and hit “Open File Location”, then from there go to the “Battlestate Games” folder, then into the “Escape From Tarkov” folder), find the game’s executable (EscapeFromTarkov.exe), right-click and go to properties, then go to the compatibility tab. Enable the “Disable Fullscreen Optimizations” option. Then, hit the “Change high DPI settings” button, and in the new window that appears, enable the “Override high DPI scaling” option. These two settings can prevent some stuttering and other problems in EFT.
10) As a final tweak, you can try setting the game to run in “Above Normal” priority in the Task Manager. Open the Task Manager while the game is running, and go to the “Details” tab. Find “EscapeFromTarkov.exe” and right click. In the drop-down menu, go to “Set Priority” and select “Above Normal”. Confirm when prompted.
Graphics Settings
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General: In EFT, switching some graphical settings to “low” (or anything other than “max”) might actually reduce performance. Here’s how that works. The engine implicitly assumes that your CPU is good enough, but that your GPU might not be. So, if you reduce a graphics setting too much, then it’s sent to the CPU rather than the GPU for processing. But because the game is not optimized, and doesn’t make use of multiple cores/threads effectively, you’re actually bottlenecking your system by switching the load to the CPU even more! To make it even more clear, your CPU is already stressed a lot (because most of the load is on one of its cores, so that core gets used to the max), and if you change graphical settings to low (because you think that’ll improve framerate), those graphical details (i.e. shadows) are then processed by the CPU rather than the GPU, because the engine thinks “oh, this guy switched shadows to low, his GPU must suck. Send the shadows to the CPU for processing!”. So, counter-intuitively, decreasing graphical fidelity worsens performance (in some cases)!
NOTE 1: A common “issue” in EFT is that scoping in causes FPS drops. Scoping in (with magnified optics) will always cause an FPS drop of around 20 FPS (your experience may vary), because the game renders the image in the optic separately from outside – so it renders everything twice. This is called “picture-in-picture” rendering. This cannot be avoided, unfortunately…
NOTE 2: Offline performance is ALWAYS worse than on-line. That is because your PC runs the server and plays on it as well. Online, you only have to worry about playing – the server is elsewhere. So don’t be discouraged! Your online performance will be better. This issue is also exacerbated if you enable AI. To test your true performance, go online!
Legend: I’ll be using a specific notation here, to indicate the estimated impact of increasing each setting on your CPU, GPU and FPS. I’ll use this notation: [CPU++ | GPU_ | FPS+], where “++” means “greatly increases”, “_” means “no change” (or extremely minor change), and “+” means “slightly increases”. Simiarly, “–” means “greatly decreases”, and “-” means slightly decreases. For CPU and GPU, we’re referring to usage, and for FPS we’re referring to Frames Per Second gained (+) or lost (-).
Let’s now tackle all in-game settings in order (in the Graphics settings menu). I’ll also offer a brief description of what each setting does, if not immediately obvious from its name:
Screen Resolution [CPU_ | GPU++ | FPS-]: I recommend using the native resolution of your display (most typically: 720p, 1080p, 1440p). This setting has a high GPU impact, but is essential for spotting enemies. The lower your resolution, the more pixelated the image. So, at longer ranges, you won’t be able to spot enemies at all. And, as mentioned in the “general” section, increasing GPU load is actually beneficial for game performance (if you don’t overdo it!).
Screen Mode [???]: This isn’t a setting that “increases” or “decreases”, strictly speaking. However, prefer the “Fullscreen” option, as it uses the least system resources, and as such provides the best framerate. Note that there is a bug (haven’t experienced it personal
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Escape From Tarkov streamer settings you ask? There is a section towards the end of the guide that includes a few of the popular streamer’s settings. Check that out if your interested in Sequisha, Deadly Slob, Klean, Smoke or Kotton’s Escape from Tarkov settings.
Patch 0.12.5 for Escape From Tarkov brought PostFX settings into the game. It’s a new tab in the options menu that allows you to finely tune post processing effects applied to the game’s visuals. It makes the game prettier, but also can give you an advantage by affecting PvP visibility. If you’re wondering how to get that edge in a life or death situation, this guide will show you the best PostFX settings for PvP visibility in Tarkov.
First of all, let’s break down what each of the sliders and options does:
*Brightness – This one basically determines the balance between black and white. Put it too high, and white will be searing while black will be gray. Put it too low and black will turn pitch dark, while white will be dimmed significantly.
*Saturation – This one determines the strenght of colors. The higher it is, the more vibrant they’ll all be. If pulled all the way down, everything will kind of blend together in a familiar Call of Duty tone.
*Clarity – This one seems to add highlights to objects, making them more distinct against the background.
*Colorfulness – As far as I can see, this one does the same thing as saturation.
*Luma Sharpen – This one gives increases the strength of the lightning without washing out the colors too much.
*Adaptive Sharpen – Sharpens the textures, kind of like the effect you get when you take painkillers in the game.
*Color Grading – Applies various filters to the entire image. Extensive testing will show whether any of these provides any advantage.
*Colorblind mode – Each of these makes the game easier to read for people with particular types of color blindness. As far as advantage to others, the same applies as above.Best PostFX settings
With that out of the way, here are the settings we recommend. They presume you’re not using any color grading filter or colorblind mode.
*Brightness – 20 on daytime maps, as high as you can handle on night maps
*Saturation – Between 15 and 25
*Clarity – Around 50
*Colorfulness – Around 30
*Luma Sharpen – Between 40 and 50
*Adaptive Sharpen – Between 30 and 40
♤Step 3 In game settings! Now use the exe to open your game, you’ll know this was done correctly because you’ll need to click next to login first, then you’ll be at your main menu. Click the gears in the bottom right for your settings for Tarkov. Click the graphics tab. Uncheck the boxes at the bottom, leaving only the ’ssaa’ option selected. If you don’t have your volume up when playing Escape from Tarkov, you will have a bad time playing the game. It is highly recommended that you utilize the highest volume setting as you.
If course, there’s no one true solution here. It’s all individual and depends on your eyesight, so we recommend you experiment with the settings and find the ones that you like the most.Nvidia game filter settings
Nvidia game filters are working with Tarkov again, and they might be a better choice than the newly-added PostFX settings. We find that the Gamma slider in Nvidia’s filters helps more than PostFX’ brightness. If you’re going to stick with that, here’s what we recommend (based on Worrun’s setup):
*Color:
*Tint Color – 0%
*Tint Intensity – 0%
*Temperature – 0
*Vibrance – 70
*Sharpen:
*Sharpen – 70%
*Ignore Film Grain – 15%
*Brightness/Contrast:
*Exposure – 0%
*Contrast – 6%
*Highlights – 21%
*Shadows – 46%
*Gamma – As high as you like
by ZeroPointZero_
TL;DR: Buy a better PC Kappa
Greetings, fellow cheek dividers and cheeki breekis! I’ve seen a lot of players struggling to maximize their framerate in this game, even with pretty beastly rigs. I’ve helped a few, but I think a guide on how to get the best performance out of your machine (especially in the current beta versions of EFT, which are not very optimized) would be appreciated by everyone. Let’s get into it.
*Patch 0.12.5 for Escape From Tarkov brought PostFX settings into the game. It’s a new tab in the options menu that allows you to finely tune post processing effects applied to the game’s visuals. It makes the game prettier, but also can give you an advantage by affecting PvP visibility.
*From here, each of the individual graphic options within Escape from Tarkov’s Video Settings menu, will be turned down to their lowest/off setting and benchmarked again, comparing it to the baseline, in order to determine how it influences performance.
DISCLAIMER: Use any and all of these tweaks at your own risk. If you don’t know what you’re doing, or are even a bit unsure, ask someone who does know. Don’t ruin your $1000 PC because you were too proud to admit you didn’t even know how to go into the BIOS!
Caveat: I only have AMD systems, so unfortunately for Intel and nVIDIA users, I won’t have many tips specific to your hardware – however, general tips (and there will be many) will apply to you as well.
Test System Configurations
System 1 – Average Tier:
CPU: AMD FX-8350 Black Edition (4 cores, 8 threads) @ 4.0 GHz (underclocked from 4.2 GHz and undervolted from ~1.45 V to ~1.3 V)
GPU: AMD Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition (2 GB GDDR5 VRAM, 1200 MHz VRAM clock, 1000 MHz GPU clock)
RAM: Corsair 32 GB (4×8 GB) DDR3 1333 MHz (XMP enabled: 1666 MHz) [16 GB would have near-identical performance]
PSU: 1000 W, 80+ Gold (Corsair)
Storage: 500 GB generic SSD (SATA)
Monitor: Generic 1680×1050 @ 60 Hz
System 2 – Above Average Tier:Escape From Tarkov Starter Guide
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 3600 (6 cores, 12 threads) @ 4.2 GHz (stock core configuration, Infinity Fabric (memory controller) overclocked to 1600 MHz to match RAM)
GPU: AMD RX 5700 XT Sapphire Pulse (8 GB GDDR6 VRAM, 1750 MHz VRAM clock, 1815 MHz GPU clock)
RAM: G.SKILL 16 GB (2×8 GB) DDR4 3200 MHz (XMP enabled: 3200 MHz, CL 14)
PSU: 1000 W, 80+ Gold (Corsair)
Storage: 250 GB Samsung 970 EVO PRO SSD (NVME M.2)
Monitor: LG-24GL600F-B 1920×1080 @ 144 Hz
Monitoring/Performance Logging Tools
1) The “fps 1” and “fps 2” command. Use the “~” key to open the console, then type the command to enable it. Type “fps 0” to disable.
2) Radeon Performance Overlay (default shortcut: CTRL+SHIFT+O) [nVidia GeForce Experience has a similar in-game overlay]
3) CPU-Z and Ryzen Master (for CPU activity monitoring and tweaking) [Also Ryzen DRAM Calculator for RAM tweaking] [Intel does not have an equivalent to Ryzen Master, but CPU-Z is generic]
4) MSI Afterburner and RivaTuner Statistics Server (RTSS) (for GPU activity monitoring and manual fan curve adjustment)
Note: Monitoring applications that require low-level system access (i.e. need to read your hardware sensors) are sometimes identified by BattleEye as potentially dangerous applications, and will be forcefully shut down when you launch the game. This is not an application that is disallowed by BSG, and your access to the game will not be revoked (the “b” word cannot be uttered here) – it will just be closed when you launch the game, and you will have to re-launch it after you open the game. There is a workaround for this with MSI Afterburner – under Enable low-level hardware access interface, change this to “kernel mode”. Then MSI Afterburner/RTSS will work ingame no issues. (thanks, /u/Splintert !)
Pre-game settings and tips
1) Update! Make sure you’re running the latest Windows version, and ensure that your BIOS, chipset drivers, sound drivers, GPU drivers, Monitor drivers and peripheral (mouse/keyboard/headphones etc) drivers are installed.
1.1) When installing a new GPU driver, make sure to fully uninstall any older driver. This is called a “clean install“, and can sometimes be an option in the driver installation menu. If it’s not, make sure to manually uninstall the older driver. Use DDU (Display Driver Uninstaller) for this – the fully manual way is also possible, but much slower (reboot in safe mode, uninstall, reboot in safe mode, install, reboot in normal mode).
2) Ensure that your PSU can handle the total power draw of your system hardware. A 350 W PSU is probably not enough. A 500 W one would be the minimum, with 750+ W being preferrable (the less power that is drawn from the PSU, the more efficient it is, unless if you draw less than half of its max rated wattage).
2.1) Ensure that your motherboard VRMs (the chips/capacitors/mosfets that handle power delivery to the CPU) are adequate for the CPU you are using. The cheaper (and older) your motherboard (in comparison to the age of the CPU), the more likely it is that your CPU is not adequately powered by the motherboard. Heavy in-game stutters (that happen at semi-regular intervals, different from the stutters the game gets because of optimization issues) are a tell-tale sign of VRM overheating that results in the CPU being underclocked heavily. I personally had this problem with System #1, which is why I underclocked and undervolted the CPU. Once I did that, the stutters I mentioned before disappeared completely. That said, do not mess with your CPU settings if you don’t know what you are doing!
3) Ensure your RAM DIMMs (if you have more than 1) are set in a dual-channel configuration (meaning that the DIMMs should be installed in alternating slots on the motherboard, if it has more than 2 slots).
3.1) Ensure that your RAM has its best rated XMP (Extreme Memory Profile, essentially RAM overclocking) enabled. It is very often that I see people having bought very fast RAM, but without the XMP enabled, it is much, much slower than advertised. This is because the default (JEDEC) profile of the RAM maxes out at 2400 MHz – so if the RAM vendor advertises a speed over that, you need to enable the XMP, or your RAM will not be utilized to its max potential. Here’s a nice guide by Corsair on how to overclock your RAM. All that said, make sure not to enable an XMP that is above what your vendor has rated the DIMMs for. That can cause all sorts of issues. If you’re unsure, either don’t mess with it, or ask someone who knows!
3.2) [Ryzen-specific] Ryzen processors like fast RAM a lot, much more than Intel processors (that’s not to say fast RAM is bad for Intel CPUs, of course – quite the contrary). To utilize the fast ram as efficiently as possible, the memory controller of the system (the chip that handles read and write operations of the RAM) must be running at a speed that’s as close as possible to the speed of the RAM. If it’s slower, some of the potential of the RAM is wasted. If it’s faster, the controller is overstressed for no reason. The memory controller was located on the motherboard on older systems, but the Ryzen processors have it integrated on the CPU – it’s known as the “Infinity Fabric” (henceforth “IF”). To make sure that your IF uses your RAM to the max, its speed (in MHz) should be equal to half of the max speed of your RAM, in MHz. So, if you have two DIMMs of DDR4 3200 MHz RAM, half of that is 1600 MHz. Ensure that your IF is running at 1600 MHz, and you’re golden. You can see the IF clockspeed in Ryzen Master, in the “Fabric Clock” field. If your RAM is running at 3200 MHz max, then the IF should clock up to 1600 MHz on its own with no action required. If not, or if your RAM is faster, you’ll need to manually tweak it. You can do this in Ryzen Master. Here’s a guide by AMD.
4) Ensure that your system is properly ventilated, free of dust/obstructions, and does not thermally throttle. If your system performs well for a while after startup but then loses a lot of performance, or if it does better in the winter than in the summer, then you’re likely a victim of thermal throttling. PC components cannot handle extreme amounts of heat, but they generate a lot of it. If it is not dissipated in a timely fashion, performance degrades heavily – the system might even perform an emergency shutdown to prevent thermal damage to the sensitive electronics. Generally, if the system is clean of dust, free of obstructions (i.e. no large objects in front of air intakes), and its fans are running properly, you should have no problems. Otherwise, amend these issues. Check CPU and GPU temperatures with MSI Afterburner (link above).
5) Your hardware should be set to “Maximum Performance” mode in the Windows Power settings. Go to “Power Options”, and see which power plan is enabled. Make sure to click the “Show additional plans” option, if it’s available. Enable either the “High Performance” plan or the “AMD Ryzen High Performance” [Ryzen-specific] plan. If this setting isn’t enabled, your components will draw less power, so the system will be more power-efficient. However, it will also not be able to perform as well as it could. Note that a higher power draw results in more heat generated, so make sure point #4 is taken care of first.
6) Disable background applications that might be using the CPU and/or GPU before playing EFT. Use the Task Manager to check which apps might be “misbehaving” in this way, and either disable or uninstall them. Antivirus software are notorious hogs of the CPU, so create an exception in your antivirus for EFT, so it’s not monitored in real-time by your antivirus.
7) Make sure the game is installed on a Solid-State Drive, if you have one. If you don’t, go buy one. Seriously, this makes a big difference – not just for EFT, but for general PC usage. Buy one!
8) Clearing the game cache or verifying the integrity of the game’s files can occasionally fix some issues. You can do this from the game launcher. At the top right, under your username, there is an arrow. Click that, and you’ll get a menu. There, you can find the “Integrity Check” and “Clear Cache” options. Use them if you are experiencing an error you can’t seem to get past.
8.1) On the subject of the game launcher, if you experience a bug, make sure to submit a bug report through the launcher. The devs can’t test all system configurations, so bugs will get through quality testing all the time. Get screenshots, record videos, type out an explanation, submit the log files, do everything you can to help the devs isolate and repair the issue. Making a Reddit post might help, or it might not. Submitting a bug report will help, however.
9) Go to the installation path of Escape from Tarkov (right-click the launcher and hit “Open File Location”, then from there go to the “Battlestate Games” folder, then into the “Escape From Tarkov” folder), find the game’s executable (EscapeFromTarkov.exe), right-click and go to properties, then go to the compatibility tab. Enable the “Disable Fullscreen Optimizations” option. Then, hit the “Change high DPI settings” button, and in the new window that appears, enable the “Override high DPI scaling” option. These two settings can prevent some stuttering and other problems in EFT.
10) As a final tweak, you can try setting the game to run in “Above Normal” priority in the Task Manager. Open the Task Manager while the game is running, and go to the “Details” tab. Find “EscapeFromTarkov.exe” and right click. In the drop-down menu, go to “Set Priority” and select “Above Normal”. Confirm when prompted.
Graphics Settings
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General: In EFT, switching some graphical settings to “low” (or anything other than “max”) might actually reduce performance. Here’s how that works. The engine implicitly assumes that your CPU is good enough, but that your GPU might not be. So, if you reduce a graphics setting too much, then it’s sent to the CPU rather than the GPU for processing. But because the game is not optimized, and doesn’t make use of multiple cores/threads effectively, you’re actually bottlenecking your system by switching the load to the CPU even more! To make it even more clear, your CPU is already stressed a lot (because most of the load is on one of its cores, so that core gets used to the max), and if you change graphical settings to low (because you think that’ll improve framerate), those graphical details (i.e. shadows) are then processed by the CPU rather than the GPU, because the engine thinks “oh, this guy switched shadows to low, his GPU must suck. Send the shadows to the CPU for processing!”. So, counter-intuitively, decreasing graphical fidelity worsens performance (in some cases)!
NOTE 1: A common “issue” in EFT is that scoping in causes FPS drops. Scoping in (with magnified optics) will always cause an FPS drop of around 20 FPS (your experience may vary), because the game renders the image in the optic separately from outside – so it renders everything twice. This is called “picture-in-picture” rendering. This cannot be avoided, unfortunately…
NOTE 2: Offline performance is ALWAYS worse than on-line. That is because your PC runs the server and plays on it as well. Online, you only have to worry about playing – the server is elsewhere. So don’t be discouraged! Your online performance will be better. This issue is also exacerbated if you enable AI. To test your true performance, go online!
Legend: I’ll be using a specific notation here, to indicate the estimated impact of increasing each setting on your CPU, GPU and FPS. I’ll use this notation: [CPU++ | GPU_ | FPS+], where “++” means “greatly increases”, “_” means “no change” (or extremely minor change), and “+” means “slightly increases”. Simiarly, “–” means “greatly decreases”, and “-” means slightly decreases. For CPU and GPU, we’re referring to usage, and for FPS we’re referring to Frames Per Second gained (+) or lost (-).
Let’s now tackle all in-game settings in order (in the Graphics settings menu). I’ll also offer a brief description of what each setting does, if not immediately obvious from its name:
Screen Resolution [CPU_ | GPU++ | FPS-]: I recommend using the native resolution of your display (most typically: 720p, 1080p, 1440p). This setting has a high GPU impact, but is essential for spotting enemies. The lower your resolution, the more pixelated the image. So, at longer ranges, you won’t be able to spot enemies at all. And, as mentioned in the “general” section, increasing GPU load is actually beneficial for game performance (if you don’t overdo it!).
Screen Mode [???]: This isn’t a setting that “increases” or “decreases”, strictly speaking. However, prefer the “Fullscreen” option, as it uses the least system resources, and as such provides the best framerate. Note that there is a bug (haven’t experienced it personal
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