Anti aliasing problem...

nikola.balevic8

Prominent
Jan 29, 2018
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So...I bought a new pc pretty solid mid range(high mid range)specs:
Processor:i3 6100 3.7 ghz
Gpu:r9 380X Gigabyte
8g ram
Now the problem at hand is that the anti aliasing from the day that i bought this Pc was pretty bad i played dota 2 paladins and Smite at first and it was't much of a issue but when i started playing gamed that where more imerssive then it started to be a big problem for games like : Gta 5, Neverwinter,Witcher 2...
Idk i was looking at games on this graphics card before and they looked fine so i don't know what are is the issue i tried updating the driver and at first it seemed to work better but i was wrong it was more or less the same.I tried overriding the graphics on the radeon but it was a insignificant difference idk what tl do rly if you guys know maybe speculate what the problem might be ill be happy to try some methods out.
 
Solution
Sorry, but there's nothing mid range anymore, especially high mid range, about an i3-6100, 380x, or 8GB RAM. They're all below mid range now. Even at the time of the launch of the 380X, which was a while ago, it was less than midrange. It took at least a 290 to be midrange at that time, and a 290x - 390x to be high mid range. With the advent of the new Nvidia 1000 series, it's fallen even farther behind.

https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/R9_380X_Strix/23.html

And 2 core CPUs are so yesterday with many of today's games that are coded for quad core, or even more.

With that out of the way, there's no reason that spec shouldn't play GTA V on decent settings, but you need to make sure HyperThreading is turned on. Otherwise you're...
Sorry, but there's nothing mid range anymore, especially high mid range, about an i3-6100, 380x, or 8GB RAM. They're all below mid range now. Even at the time of the launch of the 380X, which was a while ago, it was less than midrange. It took at least a 290 to be midrange at that time, and a 290x - 390x to be high mid range. With the advent of the new Nvidia 1000 series, it's fallen even farther behind.

https://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/R9_380X_Strix/23.html

And 2 core CPUs are so yesterday with many of today's games that are coded for quad core, or even more.

With that out of the way, there's no reason that spec shouldn't play GTA V on decent settings, but you need to make sure HyperThreading is turned on. Otherwise you're running a made for quad core game on a mere 2 cores, two threads.

Also, a 380X comes with 4GB VRAM, so it's hard to imagine you're hitting your VRAM limit with your settings, but check to see that it's not just to be sure. There's a lot of settings you can crank in GTA V, some of which adversely affect performance.

Lastly, if you can't get the in game AA to work as desired, try disabling it and using one of AMD's AA options in the Radeon settings. Also, if you go fairly high with settings on that rig, you're going to be limited to about 40 FPS. That's if using Vsync, and FXAA.

[video="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qwPdl3ZjBbU"][/video]



 
Solution