Bad Draw Distance and Stuttering in nearly every game

deadly4200

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Oct 22, 2015
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Hey Guys
I recently replaced my old AMD Radeon HD 6570 with an EVGA GTX 750.
As soon as I installed it I turned on NFS Rivals,however I noticed some stuttering issues,I thought it had something to do with my RAM.I got 4 more gigs of RAM,and the stuttering still persists.I also got these weird issues with bad draw distance with shadows and textures,and what's worst is that it happens with literally every game.What's really strange is that it happens in old games too,like Legal Street Racing:Redline
Any help here?I tried almost everything.
This guy has the same problems,maybe he described it better than me:
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/answers/id-2135966/strange-lod-shadow-issue-games.html

Here are my specs:
Nvidia GTX 750
8 GB RAM
i3 3220 3.33 GHz
My motherboard was built in.It says that it's Lenovo ThinkCentre Edge72
 
Since you replaced an AMD card for an Nvidia one, did you clean out the previous drivers before installing the new ones? It's not mandatory, but it's usually highly recommended to use Display Driver Uninstaller.

Other than that, it looks like a texture streaming issue. Basicly, the game's textures aren't loaded fast enough (your HDD is fragmented, your CPU and/or RAM aren't working as they should, your MB might be having issues transferring data between components (VERY rare, but happened to me with some pre-built MBs from friends' computers)).
1) Run a disk defragmentation if your disk is fragmented. I personally recommend Defraggler over Windows' default utility (works faster and better)
2) Run a disk check command and check for bad sectors. Open up a command prompt and type in "chkdsk /R" without double quotes (case sensitive). It may take a while, so do that when you have enough spare time in your hands.
3) Run test tools, such as Prime95 for CPU and Memtest86 for the RAM. If they end up with any errors, it may be a sign that a specific piece of hardware might be failing, so you might want to change them. Your HDD's manufacturer site will also likely have diagnostic tools for their units, so go over their download center and grab it, then run it and check for errors.
4) Change the motherboard to something that isn't coming from a pre-built. When you buy hardware from a generic electronics shop, components are what they are, but PSU and MB almost always tend for the crappy side...
 


I have tried uninstalling all of my previous drivers before,yet it didn't work.I am currently defragging my hard drives.That seems to be the problem,as 49% of C: is fragmented.I'll update the post when I'm done.
 


None of that helped.
 
Well, besides the MoBo, the only thing left is that your drivers aren't handling LOD correctly. Do try to uninstall them with the utility linked above, if you didn't already.
Just get the clean drivers reinstalled and ignore any other software (e.g. Nvidia experience, control panels, Shadowplay, etc)
 


Thanks for the help,but,that didn't work either,I uninstalled every graphics card driver I had,and I downloaded the GTX 750 driver from EVGA's website,but the problem is still there...I honestly don't know what to do anymore
 
First thing I'd try is a clean Windows setup, I don't think I have ever run across a disk that was almost 50% fragmented. That pretty much shows that the system was never re-installed clean and there was a lot of data copy, re-copy, program setup, etc.. going on.

What is the power supply wattage in your system? Did you make sure it can handle the 750?
 


Clean Windows setup? like format every hard drive?