Isn't Optimus killing the game after a few minutes a known issue? <.<
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Isn't Optimus killing the game after a few minutes a known issue? <.<
I believe this *may* be the driver you need for your laptop. When attempting to build an XPS laptop from Dell, I'm only presented with choices that are compatible with the drivers below.
http://www.nvidia.com/object/noteboo...ql-driver.html
The first link I sent was me overlooking your operating system.
Edit: You can download the Final Fantasy XIV benchmark as well to see if your game *could* run at a stable rate.
http://lodestone.finalfantasyxiv.com...nchmark02.html
But that confuses me cause I also play Aion, Sims 3, Starwars the Old Republic, and Adobe CS5.5 collection. I'm confused to why I would need to do the driver thingy if the games work fine. T.T I'm stressing out. I wish they had a tech number I can call,
Aion is surprisingly a beautiful game for low demand on graphic power (except for sieges).
I'm concerned that your DirectX report thinks the graphic controller is Intel-based. If you paid more than $1000 for this thing, it really should be saying NVidia of some sort.
If push comes to shove and you're available tomorrow evening, could try to remote to your computer and try to get some things squared away. *is struck by lightning from the SENA gods*
I would suggest the NVidia link in one of my previous posts, doing all the defaults, when you get the message that stops you, choose the "Continue Anyway". Computer will restart.
Then try the next link for the FFXIV benchmark that will test your system's performance and stability with FF14. Hitting Agree should start the download. Test it out, see if the benchmark does not crash.
Edit: And if for some super strange reason your computer doesn't turn on after the drivers, the fallback plan is to restart your computer, continue to press F8 as the computer is coming up, then select "Last Known Good Configuration" to restore the drivers you had before this post.
Edit2: Oooh I learned something new! Had no idea about Optimus.
= FailQuote:
Card name: Intel(R) HD Graphics Family
Manufacturer: Intel Corporation
Chip type: Intel(R) HD Graphics Family
DAC type: Internal
Device Key: Enum\PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_0116&SUBSYS_04B81028&REV_09
Display Memory: 1696 MB
Dedicated Memory: 64 MB
Shared Memory: 1632 MB
If your Laptop has switchable graphics, you need to manually enable the NVidia Card. Usually this can be done by right clicking your desktop and selecting Configure Switchable Graphics or somethign to that effect. But before you go driving yourself crazy you really need to 100% confirm you have a NVidia card inside. Dell has a real bad habbit of saying a Laptop CAN come with one card, but selling it with another.
I'm still confused on what Benchmark is T.T
It is what it says it is!
Display tab,Device
Name: Intel(r) HD Graphics Family
Manufacturer: Intel Corporation
Chip Type: Intel(R) HD Graphics Family
DAC Type: Internal
Approx. Total Memory: 1696 MB
Current Display Mode: 1600 x 900 (32 bit) (60Hz)
Monitor: Generic PnP Monitor
Thats what the display tab says. Don't say fail when I donno much about comps...
The Benchmark link Fiosha Maureiba gave you allows you to run a test of how well or poorly XIV will run on your system.
I'm not sure where or how you see a Nvidia card as I do not.
if you run the FFXIV config .exe, you can choose the system information button and you will see EXACTLY what XIV sees when you are running your game. Also, ran my DxDiag just to show you what I see.
http://i600.photobucket.com/albums/t...amerfan001.jpg
What's the model of your laptop? I think confirmation that you have a laptop using nVidia's GPU-switching Optimus technology would help us diagnose your problem.
If you know you have Optimus already, you may need to specifically configure some games (like FFXIV) to switch to your nVidia graphics card from the lower-power Intel one when they run.
This article from Dell support may help.
http://support.dell.com/support/topi...=en&l=en&s=dhs