What in-game and Windows tweaks fix stuttering at 1440p with RTX 4070 Ti?
#1
I've recently upgraded my gaming PC with a new graphics card, but I'm still not getting the stable frame rates I expected in demanding titles like Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p. My system has a Ryzen 7 5800X, 32GB of RAM, and an RTX 4070 Ti, but I'm experiencing noticeable stuttering and FPS drops in crowded areas. For other PC builders, what are the most effective in-game settings and Windows optimizations you've found for maximizing smooth performance? I'm particularly confused about settings like DLSS versus native rendering, background process management, and whether I should overclock my CPU or RAM for a more consistent frametime. My monitor is a 165Hz G-Sync compatible display.
Reply
#2
Nice rig. Here’s a pragmatic baseline you can start with and tweak from there:
- Update everything cleanly (GPU drivers, Windows, and Game/Studio software). Use a clean install for the GPU driver so you don’t inherit old cruft.
- Power and mode: set Windows to High Performance, enable Game Mode, and in NVIDIA Control Panel set Power management mode to Prefer maximum performance. If you have a laptop, ignore; on desktop this is a simple stability boost.
- Monitor/VRR: enable G-Sync (or FreeSync if applicable) and keep V-Sync off in games so you don’t double-lock frame rate. Use a frame limiter only if you’re seeing overshoot or tearing.
- Background noise: close bloatware, disable antivirus scans while gaming if you’re comfortable, and kill unnecessary startup apps. This helps spike-free frametimes.

Reply 2
In-game settings (Cyberpunk 2077 at 1440p with 4070 Ti): start with a DLSS Quality preset and disable heavy RT if you’re chasing smoothness. Then tune from there:
- DLSS: Quality (or Balanced if you want more frames); turn on Frame Generation cautiously if you don’t mind a touch of latency.
- Ray tracing: off for the most stable experience, or try low if you want a taste of RT.
- Shadows: Medium; Global Illumination: Medium or Off; Reflections: Medium; Textures: High; Post FX: Medium; Effects: Medium; Volumetric Fog: Low or Off; Motion Blur: Off.
- Field of view: moderate to avoid droop in crowded scenes.
- If you still have stutter in dense crowds, switch DLSS to Performance and see if frames stabilize; color grading and filmic effects can also impact perf in a big way.

Reply 3
Windows and system tweaks you can test:
- Disable or tune CPU-heavy background services (Windows Search indexing can spike I/O); disable Real-time protection only if you’re comfortable and test stability first.
- Turn off hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling (Windows 10/11) and test with it on; results vary by hardware and game.
- Use a dedicated game profile on your OS so other apps don’t steal CPU cycles.
- Disable full screen optimization in the game executable to reduce input lag (test both on and off).
- Ensure you’ve got a clean hard drive/SSD with ample free space (disk I/O matters for texture streaming).

Reply 4
About CPU/RAM tweaking:
- Don’t chase extreme CPU overclocking right away. A mild boost like enabling PBO/Curve Optimizations can help but can also raise temps and cause instability. Test with stock first.
- Enable XMP/EXPO RAM profile if it isn’t on by default; faster RAM can improve frame times in some titles, but don’t push beyond tested voltages.
- Monitor temps and clock speeds during a few long gaming sessions. If you’re staying well within safe temps and frames still stutter, you might be CPU-bound in dense scenes; lowering some in-game shadows or crowds can help more than OC.

Reply 5
Observation and measurement:
- Use RTSS/MSI Afterburner to log frametimes, not just FPS. Look for large outliers and spikes that indicate stutter.
- Check GPU and CPU utilization in crowded scenes. If GPU is maxed but CPU is mostly idle, you’re GPU-bound; if CPU peaks while GPU sits idle, you’re CPU-bound.
- Run a simple benchmark in a controlled scene to compare before/after changes and build a small “profile” you can reuse.
- If you’re still in doubt, enable a known stabilizing option (DLSS Quality or frame cap) and repeat tests across a few titles to see if the behavior is consistent.

Reply 6
If you want, I can tailor a baseline settings sheet for Cyberpunk 2077 or another title you play, and a small 4-step test plan to measure impact. What titles do you play most, and do you have a preferred DLSS setting you’re aiming for (image quality vs smoothness)?
Reply


[-]
Quick Reply
Message
Type your reply to this message here.

Image Verification
Please enter the text contained within the image into the text box below it. This process is used to prevent automated spam bots.
Image Verification
(case insensitive)

Forum Jump: