Quote Originally Posted by Ketone View Post
Thanks for the replies.

I don't run any background defrag programs, or anything taxing on the resources. No Antivirus or antimalware software Just Rainmeter and driver controllers for the Video and Sound devices.

"when was the last time you did a registry scrub?"
The rig was just built a little over a month ago. Total format and clean installs.

"is your laptop also a radeon chipset? i've noticed the radeon tech doesn't run the game as efficiently."
Yes it is. The funny thing is that it runs the game nearly as well as my desktop. It could even be considered more stable considering that it can run the game in full screen mode without encountering the issues that my desktop does using near identical settings. The only difference would be the screen size.

"From what I can tell, when in full screen mode it prioritizes resources to to FFXIV"
Now that you mention it, when I was trying to find a fix for the problem, I found this little program that someone made called FFXIV Priority Booster. Link. The guy who made it was having a problem that sounded similar to mine. Quoting his post from the link:



I tried using it but saw no measurable difference in performance, but then again I'm using a quad core processor. The program does what it advertises though. Keeps FFXIV at high priority (or whatever you set it to) and organizes threads.
I've noticed this problem on my alienware laptop with the 'turbo booster' where it overclocks certain threads to increase performance. i've noticed this doesn't really work as intended for most applications i use. so i turn it off and force it to use the entire chip. it draws more power and produces more heat, but that's why I have a badass cooling pad.

my guess is you may be experiencing something similar. as laptop chipsets behave very differently than desktop counterparts. when in beta I dedicated two cores to FFXIV and set another as a backup and it showed much improved results. my desktop at the time had no problems, all problems i had were purely on my laptop and related to the processor not knowing where to put resources. dedicating two cores helped considerably, but i was always a little afraid i'd blow them out.

For now i would say just hang tight if the game is playable. I'm hoping the new engine for 2.0 alleviates a lot of this. from what i can tell it's optimized for mid-range machines and not high end. I have dual 580s in SLI and they crash whenever i set the game to the highest settings. a single 580 should be able to run the game fine, yet i see issues on anything above standard settings.

how were you measuring performance? using the benchmark utility?

I ran furmark the other day and my system crashed hard. I seem to have some instability somewhere in my system (most likely drivers) i need to find.

edit:

check your HDD too. that's my current bottle neck for the game and the major source of my loading times on my desktop. my laptop has an SSD and loads pretty fast all the time as long as my processor isnt' freaking out