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  1. #1
    Player
    Jimoori's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2015
    Posts
    45
    Character
    Jimoori Deluxe
    World
    Jenova
    Main Class
    Pugilist Lv 60

    Can I run at max settings?

    Currently I have a GTX 970 and an i5 intel chip (most recent model from 2015). 16gb of RAM and directx 11 turned on.

    But I am having trouble running the game at Maximum settings. I don't know if my build can't handle it or if something else is a problem. If I turn the settings up my computer will overheat and freeze after a few minutes. I'd like ot know from anyone if these parts are enough to run at max settings and I just need to get better cooling. Or if my build isn't enough for max settings and I need to stay on potato quality.

    Any other tips would be greatly appreciated, I really want to enjoy this game at it's best.
    (0)

  2. #2
    Player
    Darkstride's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Limsa Lominsa
    Posts
    1,604
    Character
    Ruin Darkstride
    World
    Excalibur
    Main Class
    Sage Lv 100
    Maximum setting at what resolution?

    You could try the benchmark to see what performance your setup is capable of:

    http://na.finalfantasyxiv.com/benchmark/
    (0)

  3. #3
    Player
    MikeWW's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2016
    Posts
    127
    Character
    Hue Hue
    World
    Cactuar
    Main Class
    Goldsmith Lv 70
    Your 970 and i5 should be good enough for 60hz at 1080p most of the time. If you are playing at higher resolutions you may get lower framerates (or much lower at 4K resolution).

    Computer overheating and freezing should not happen at all unless something is seriously wrong. I would find out exactly what components are overheating by using Open Hardware Monitor software.

    If CPU is overheating, the heatsink was probably put on wrong on the i5. This is very dangerous if this is overheating, get someone who knows what he is doing install the heatsink on the CPU. and FYI, if you try to use a CPU without a heatsink it could melt.

    If GPU is overheating, you probably have incorrect overclocking settings and should set it back to default overclocking, or even move it back to OEM voltage and core clock speed. If you tried to reseat the heatsink and aren't sure you did it right, get someone who knows what he is doing to install it again.

    If PSU is rated at less than 400W or it is failing, you might be pulling more electricity than it can supply properly.

    If the above aren't the issues and nothing is overheating, I'd do a memtest86 to see if a RAM stick is going bad, and disable windows AERO.
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