

If you have it set too high (in combination with other settings), you'll run out of VRAM. Generally won't have much of an effect on frames, but higher settings will hammer your video RAM. 100%.) I've noticed some weirdness on video captured with Fraps and Shadowplay with sampling turned up, and it doesn't look like it does on your display. If you're going to be doing a lot of YouTube recording or streaming, you might want to make sure this is turned off (i.e. If you're finding that Arma 3 is not using enough GPU power, then this is the setting you can change to force it to work harder without losing frames. This is called supersampling, and it's one way of getting very accurate AA and very high image quality. This will make sure you don't put yourself at a disadvantage.Įnthusiast systems should experiment with >100% in conjuntion with AA. Mid and higher end systems should leave it to 100% with FXAA or low AA. Only lower this if you're not getting any luck with other settings though. At 50%, you could potentially double your FPS - though the lower rendering resolution will make it harder to spot targets at range. Lower range systems can use settings below 100% with FXAA to gain frames at the cost of bluring out the screen. Settings lower than 100% are upscaled (like games consoles), and settings higher are downscaled. This sets the rendering resolution of the game to something other than your native window.
