Nvidia players can head to Nvidia Control Panel and change the mode for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order from Power Management Mode to Prefer Maximum Performance as well. In the GTX 10 series, this can be done by setting the Vertical Sync to Fast however you must disable the in-game V-Sync to make it work properly.
Everything I press the pause button on Jedi Fallen Order, the frames drop to unplayable levels when I unpause. I've looked at two solutions. Disabling e sync helps with the menu itself stuttering, and async helps with the game overall stuttering, but fixes nothing else, and the frames are just stuck after the pause thing happening. And apparently running the game at 60fps can help stability, but us pc guys want all the fps so that’s kind of irrelevant. While I love playing games in 120fps (the max my TV can do) I would completely be happy with 60fps on this game. But even limited to that, I get stuttering and jittering all the time. 1. Firstly, navigate to the Global Setting tab in NVIDIA Control Panel (3D Settings > Manage 3D settings > Global Settings) and then set the Shade Cache Size to either 10 GB or 100 GB if you have sufficient storage space. This tweak can help alleviate stuttering problems and improve performance in STAR WARS Jedi: Survivor. However, the performance seems to be one of the game's main issues at launch, particularly on PC. German website GameStar posted a gameplay video of Star Wars Jedi: Survivor running on a GeForce . 339 71 67 187 103 360 76 229