

In 2014, Assassin’s Creed: Unity, pegged as Ubisoft’s first “true” next-gen game, ran at an appalling 24 FPS at 1440p on the flagship GeForce GTX 980. and The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, punished even top-tier gaming PCs. Back in 2005, early-generation Xbox 360 games like F.E.A.R. It’s been this way for the past few generations. So while the average new game may be more resource intensive, that also means titles can take better advantage of modern PC hardware.

You’ll find that, all of a sudden, AAA games aren’t running at a flawless 60 FPS on a mainstream GPU anymore.

Those shiny, new consoles are outfitted with mid to enthusiast-class hardware, driving PC system requirements up. If you still find that you are running into trouble with the game (regardless of the display mode), a video card update may fix the problem.Whether we like it or not, the beginning of a new console generation brings both trouble and opportunities for PC gamers. By tuning the horizontal and vertical holds, you may be able to improve the picture quality. You can also try manually adjusting your computer monitor. In some games, Windowed Mode may appear in place of the Full screen option. Under the main menu of the game, select Options, and un-check Full Screen mode. If you continue to have trouble playing your game in full screen mode, switch to windowed mode. Select the Display tab to adjust your resolution to 1024 x 768.Adjust your screen resolution to 1024 x 768 and click Apply.Select the Advanced display settings option at the bottom of the menu.From your desktop, right-click and select Display Settings.Adjust your screen resolution to 1024 x 768 and click OK.

