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  1. #1
    Player
    Zoxe's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2015
    Posts
    1
    Character
    Hinoto Mori
    World
    Goblin
    Main Class
    Ninja Lv 60

    Streaking, Flickering graphics at high FPS

    Hey All,

    I've been experiencing some issues lately. The graphical issues I'm encountering only happen in FFXIV. Other games I play, everything works great! Here's my setup:

    Windows 10
    eVGA NVIDIA GeForce 780 Ti
    ASUS ROG Swift PG278Q Monitor (G-Sync, 144Hz)

    Now it doesn't matter which monitor I play on (I've tried a 60Hz screen at 1080p). No matter what I do, Any basically any FPS higher than 35, I see horrible yellow streaks and flickering all over my screen.

    I've tried running every single graphical setting at the minimum, and the problem still persists. I've uploaded a video to Youtube that illustrates the problem:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I12DCjbIqpU

    Does anyone have any idea how I can resolve this? The issue also occurred in Windows 8.1.

    Cheers
    (0)

  2. #2
    Player
    Raist's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Posts
    2,457
    Character
    Raist Soulforge
    World
    Midgardsormr
    Main Class
    Thaumaturge Lv 60
    probly need to adjust settings on the card first, and then in-game. Enable Vsynch options, either adaptive or full synch--might want to do the triple buffer thing too just in case.

    If you've got the super-clocked model, could try undoing the heavy overclocks (it's something like 20% over reference). Even if it isn't the super-clock model, it may still be overclocked a bit--many vendors do this to get an edge on the competition. May want to compare your actual clocks to the reference clocks:

    Nvidia reference specs
    eVGA's Super-Clocked specs

    Otherwise, may want to take a look at either your cooling (dust bunnies in heatsinks/fans can wreak havoc) or potential power supply issues (reference card lists 250w consumption, superclock model requires 42 amps on the 12v rail---the bugger draws a lot of power regardless of which model you have).
    (0)
    Last edited by Raist; 08-28-2015 at 09:32 AM.