I do indeed do a lot of it (Razer Cortex Game Booster, GBoost, Soluto, CCleaner, changing game configuration files, messing with msconfigs and Services so unneccessary stuff isn't running at startup/boot and/or in general, messing with things in task manager; usually to set the game's priority to realtime), so I'll just address what I don't do or am too scared to do, possibly irrationally so.DrunkOnEstus said:I just wrote a long post in a different thread about doing this, but I'll condense it here to help out and stuff.You probably do a lot of these things already, but I do this for a living and a lot of people still don't do this kind of maintenance and it helps a lotjamail77 said:Snip
I've heard of Malwarebytes Free but not SuperAntiSpyware.DrunkOnEstus said:Getting rid of bad shit:
Even if you have Defender or Norton (you shouldn't have Norton or McAfee), there's free programs I highly recommend that pick up a lot of stuff that gets past the filters.
Update and run Malwarebytes Free https://www.malwarebytes.org/ and SuperAntiSpyware Free http://superantispyware.com/. Malwarebytes gets rid of a lot of malware, adware, spyware, tracking cookies and blah blah that slows things down. SuperAntiSpyware picks up what makes it past there and is great for getting rid of "piggyback" programs that come with installers like toolbars and things that waste memory. Update and run these 2 about once a week.
Also, who the hell would use Defender or Norton that is also a gamer looking to improve performance? Anyone in that position must know enough of the bare minimum to know to never use those. I could understand the average person, but a gamer specifically looking to improve performance?
When I took my laptop in to be repaired and upgraded to 8GB RAM I also replaced the HDD with an SSD. While I don't need to worry about it as you say, should I still bother doing it at all? Will it help at all? You know, it's unfortunate. I had to get a smaller size one to save money. It only has 119 usable GB. Thankfully, I have 2 external HDDs at 500 GB each and a soon to be third one.DrunkOnEstus said:Keep your hard drive defragmented (unless its an SSD, then you don't need to worry about it). The utility built into Windows works, but I recommend Defraggler by the folks who make CCleaner (I saw that program mentioned in the thread and I really recommend it as well). I had friends with $2,000 computers who had like 55% fragmentation on their HDDs, and it can make everything slower and not good and stuff.
I try to do this, but I haven't checked in a while.DrunkOnEstus said:Make sure your graphics drivers are updated.
I think I know enough to do it, but I do feel some small uncomfortability. Is that small uncomfortability enough for you to advise me to stay away or based on how you've read my OP and responses do you think I'll be safe doing it?DrunkOnEstus said:While you're there you might as well update your BIOS, but this is up to you. You may not see performance improvements from it, and while the process is a HELL of a lot safer than it used to be, there's still an inherent risk in your computer losing power or something while the BIOS is being flashed. If any of this makes you uncomfortable, don't worry about upgrading your BIOS.
I LOVE it's FPS counter and video recorder. I trust it over Steam's, that's for sure. That goes especially when it gives a similar value to FRAPS (last time I checked which must have been a year or less ago, don't rememeber). Steam's always seems inaccurate. I don't know why but if I had to guess it probably has something to do with Steam overlay and how that affects the calcuations.DrunkOnEstus said:If you're cool with 3rd party programs, I love Razer's Game Booster. [snip]The program also has an optional FPS counter, screenshot taker, and video recorder. It can also defrag individual folders for your game installations. I use it pretty much every time I launch a game: http://www.razerzone.com/cortex/game-booster
Every game I have seems to run better in windowed non-fullscreen, lowest resolution mode. You say it's a bad idea, but with the GPU I have I'm not sure it's such a bad idea for the CPU to handle more of the performance. At this point, I really am talking complete ignorance though, so it's better you tell me what's right or wrong with what I just said. I knew relatively what I was talking about above in the rest of this post.DrunkOnEstus said:Sidenotes: Don't launch a game in windowed mode to gain performance, you generally won't and will only make your life more difficult if you don't need your game windowed/borderless windowed. If possible, use your monitor's native resolution to run a game and work the other settings around that, upscaling is very bad and lowering the resolution needlessly can actually make the performance more reliant on your CPU instead of your GPU. Lowering shadow resolution/quality is the first place to go for big gains that aren't noticed a whole lot visually. With a laptop I don't recommend MSAA for most games as its too "expensive" (resource wise) but FXAA and MLAA are post-process solutions that are less expensive and worth it if you're okay with their relative blurriness compared to the jaggies they get rid of.
Thanks for the resource!DrunkOnEstus said:Before launching any game, check out the pcgamingwiki entry for it: pcgamingwiki.com. Some games have weird quirks or literally essential mods or settings to run and look optimal, and this site is a great resource to make sure that you're running the game the best you can.
Both sound like a good idea and I like doing it for fun myself despite my relative ignorance to you. I'll make sure to keep it in mind. Thanks!DrunkOnEstus said:Feel free to PM me if you have any questions about anything, there's also the "PC builders and hardware group" here at the Escapist where we talk about things like this sometimes and it's what I do for fun when it isn't my job. Good luck!
If I ever get comfortable messing with the BIOS I'll make sure to do that.DrunkOnEstus said:One additional thing I thought of is looking in the BIOS (when the computer is turning on, continuously press DEL or F2 or whatever it says for system setup) and see if there's a setting in there to raise the amount of memory allocated to the GPU, or any other power settings in there to help you out. Sometimes laptop manufacturers configure things to maximize the battery life at the expense of performance so it's worth taking a look at it. You also have enough system RAM now to give the GPU whatever it will take.
It also occurred to me that the AMD website with a possible beta driver (or whatever's newest) for your mobility Radeon would be a better and probably newer driver than the one you would find on your laptop manufacturer's website.
I think my drivers are up to date, but I'll make sure to check.