![]() The frame rate dips were few and far between, especially when facing against some of the larger enemies of the game that love firing off particle effects every chance they get. The action was buttery smooth on our 144hz display, running on a Ryzen 5 3600, 32GB of RAM and a Zotac GeForce RTX 3060 Ti. If you have the monitor and hardware to support it, we fully recommend keeping it at 120. Nioh 2 provides a frame rate cap, allowing the PC version of the game to run at up to 120 frames per second. Keeping it on makes the game look great, but turning it off will provide a massive boost in frame rate, and could end up being the difference between Nioh 2 being a laggy mess and feeling wonderful to play. Sure, it results in a dip in quality, but on the other hand, being able to play a fast-paced game like Nioh 2 depends more on stable frame rates than it does on looking pretty.Īnother option to look at if running Nioh 2 on weaker hardware is Ambient Occlusion. Rendering resolution especially helps weaker systems run the game smoothly by allowing the game to cut some down on exactly how much it’s rendering. While the options seem a bit bare, they’re actually more than enough to be able to tinker about with, making the game quite scalable between mid-range and high-end PC hardware. Shadows: Off, Low Quality, Medium Quality, High Quality. ![]() ![]() Display Mode: Fullscreen, Windowed, Borderless. ![]()
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