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this is from your graphic card , i recommend you to upgrade it as soon as possible. 

or you can make the settings in CS:GO like really really low .

the lowest thing because some frames doesn't show up. 

and run it in Fullscreen mode to make it run with better performance   

 

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You didnt explain your probleme well, so this what i can do for u

- If u have probleme with size :

Go to Game Options & Change the Video Size exactly like the Computer !

- If u have probleme with graphic :

Your Graphic Card isnt nice to be used on this Game try to change it or change the game graphic the same or lowest then what ur graphi card can handle !

 

Hope this will help u,

Regards.

Edited by _L0rd_
Verbal warning for [Post-Hunt], READ RULES !
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1 hour ago, Bedreddine™ said:

try to seeRésolution of ecran in your PC , then change it at the same size of CS GO ! 

 

55 minutes ago, Twins said:

Go at fix Video Resulation becuase you need to adapt the Screen with CSGO Settings. Try to run in a windows becuase it helps alot :) if you have problems with that contact me

Resolution is ok , i tried run in a windows too and still same

48 minutes ago, _L0rd_ said:

this is from your graphic card , i recommend you to upgrade it as soon as possible. 

or you can make the settings in CS:GO like really really low .

the lowest thing because some frames doesn't show up. 

and run it in Fullscreen mode to make it run with better performance   

 

I dont think its from my graphic card , 1 month ago i hadnt this problem

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Try setting the texture rendering to low. Also, it might be that your database Has been corrupt , perhaps by a virus, and that's why overtime, your cs go graphics looks low quality. 
Try To Edit the video.txt file . if you don't know where the video.txt file is :  
C:\ProgramFiles(x86)\Steamapps\Common\Counter-Strike Global Offensive\CsGo\Cfg

or similar directory (depends where you have installed it, either drive C or D)

Also make sure your drivers are Updated. Try a different texture filtering setting. Validate game cache, update drivers with a clean install.. 

And also,

Make sure settings in your nvidia/Catalyst panel aren't set to override game settings. Also, Check your launch options and autoexecs for the game.

 

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Hello, dear member Community , I will try to help you solve this problem and customize your settings games.

CS:GO has a variety of settings you can optimize to your advantage. But if you’re new to the game, these can seem overwhelming. Luckily for you, I have professional experience and will teach you how to set up the game for the maximum competitive advantage.

While this guide will disable some annoying things and help out your FPS,  it’s obvious that you have do your part as player to adapt to these changes and play around with them to see what works best for you. Much of this configuration is personal preference, but there are tweaks you can make to in-game graphics, Nvidia settings, key bindings, and more to help outplay the competition.

Let’s begin.

DETERMINE SCREEN RESOLUTION
I have played on every resolution setting and my personal favorite is 1680×1050. This makes the game slightly stretched to see models better and bigger without sacrificing the field of view. A majority of players play on 24in. monitors and these settings will have no problem, however, I’ve played on smaller monitors and these settings don’t work too well for  that.

If you’re playing CS:GO on a 17in. laptop you will probably be better off with 4:3 / 800×600 just so you can see the models. However, there is no “one true resolution” and that is why you have to play around with them and find what works best for you.

I have noticed that many professional players are using a 4:3 / 800×600 resolution but keep in mind that a majority of them are players from the 1.6 era like myself and are used to it. This setting allows players to hit very high FPS rates but it actually cuts down your field of view down to 74 degrees while a 16:9 configuration will have 90 degrees.

I’ve played on 4:3 for a while but I began to have tunnel vision and started to see obvious models on edges which were cut out by my small field of view. This can bother some players but it’s an excellent way to increase FPS.

OPTIMIZE LAUNCH OPTIONS
Not too many players know they can customize CS:GO launch options unless they are a hardcore gamer. If you haven’t done so already, changing these options will turn you into a CS:GO power user and by default also make you a better gamer. There are countless launch options to choose from but I’ll show you a screenshot of mine as well as provide you with a po[CENSORED]r option:

                                                       cs-go-launch-options-1.png?resize=612,60

My settings are based on a lot of trial and error but if you want to go with something easy, here are some po[CENSORED]r settings:

-novid -high -threads 4 -nojoy +cl_forcepreload 1 -nod3d9ex

Here is what these settings do:

“-novid” Skips Valve animation at launch
“-high” Prioritizes CS:GO  for CPU
“-threads 4” Dictates threads used by CPU (use 2 if you use a dual-core CPU)
“-nod3d9ex” Makes ALT+TAB faster
“-nojoy” Removes joystick support
“+cl_forcepreload 1” Increases FPS by preloading maps
Wow! That was a lot of things to go over and they may seem a little confusing. Don’t worry though, you only have to make these settings once and then spend your time playing CS:GO.

LOWER VIDEO SETTINGS
I’ll make this section as brief as possible: the lower the video settings are, the more FPS CS:GO will have. I know this may seem counter-intuitive if your PC’s hardware can max everything out, but you should keep in mind that this game is all about gameplay, not graphics!

Take a look at the screenshot of how I adjust my in-game settings:

cs-go-game-settings-1.png?resize=953,390

 

This is what these settings control:

Global Shadow Quality: There really isn’t much to this setting, however, there is a catch.  Shadow quality in this game is like the second most FPS-consuming setting.  If you want everything to look pretty, go high and play on low fps. You’ll also have the added perk of seeing shadows from players much further.  

Model / Texture Detail: This is the amount of detail every model in the game should have. It doesn’t consume much FPS from gaming rigs, but there isn’t a big difference between high and low.

Effect Detail: This controls how beautiful the game looks. This setting won’t change much in maps like “Dust II” which has no visual effects except for a few clouds and a burning car. However, I change this quite often depending on a map. On small compact maps I have it set to  low and on bigger maps I have it on high or medium. This is because this setting also detects how far from a player’s view it should start drawing models. So if you have it set to low on big maps that have distances, it will increase the chances of models appearing suddenly (popping-out).

Shader Detail: This is just useless and there is no other way of saying it. Basically, this controls  the look of tiles on the floor or reflections on the glass. On maps with windows (Nuke, Office. etc), you know the struggle of looking through reflections so you should always have this setting on low.

Multicore Rendering: This allows CS:GO to utilize more than one core from the CPU. More cores means more FPS so you’ll want this on.

Multisampling Anti-Aliasing Mode: This is the setting that eats all your FPS away. CS:GO doesn’t look that bad with it being off once you get used to it.  All it really does is just smooths the edges and makes textures look better and more realistic. If you have a good machine you can put it on 2X.

Texture Filtering Mode: This tells the system the difference between a texture when looking at it from far away or up close. Bilinear and trilinear has no significant difference in FPS. What it does do, however, is fix the boundaries of mipmaps (pixels) Anisotropic consumes a little more amount of FPS because it uses square mipmaps.

FXAA Anti-Aliasing: This also eats up quite a bit of FPS and should be turned off. What it does is essentially simple but it’s also a big amount of work because it has to find all the edges and smooth, every single one of them. This obviously makes game look better, but it’s also something you can play without.

Vertical Sync Players generally tell others to turn off Vertical Synchronization (VSync) to decrease the in-game lag but they are actually missing out an important feature of the game. Monitors have different refresh rates and these rates determine the number of times a screen refreshes itself in a second. What VSync does is prevent the video card to do anything to the current frame on screen until and unless the monitor completes its refresh cycle. During this small time, the video card either rapidly copies the off-screen graphics into display (Double Buffering) or simply switch between them or do both (Triple Buffering). Enabling it may cause input lag due to the time left in the refresh cycle to wind up. Disabling it may cause screen tearing in which two or more frames are drawn together at a moment.

Motion Blur Do yourself a favor and just leave this off. Trust me!

CONFIGURE GRAPHICS CARD
Last but not least on this list on how to optimize CS:GO is the graphics card. Not all graphics cards are the same so you’ll have to experiment a bit with this one. And depending on your GPU manufacturer, these settings may or may not be the same across the board.

Generally, you won’t want to change too many of these settings if you don’t know what they do. However, if you’re an experienced PC gamer, take a look at my Nvidia control panel for some ideas:

                  cs-go-nvidia-1-1.png?resize=890,507

                  cs-go-nvidia-2-1.png?resize=893,510

                  cs-go-nvidia-3-1.png?resize=799,672


                  cs-go-nvidia-4-1.png?resize=885,835

 

THE CHOICE IS YOURS
CS:GO (and every other PC video game) is all about having fun. I encourage you to take some of my suggestions and see for yourself how you like them. Ultimately, the choice is yours and it’s up to you to determine what helps you be a better player.

I hope this brief guide will dramatically help you improve your FPS and your gameplay experience. If you would like to see more about CS:GO (config builds, mouse sensitivity & DPI, keybindings, HUD customization, crosshairs, etc.), just let me know in the comments below. If you have any questions about CS:GO,  you can also contact me on PM.

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hello 

try this lunch options will help you to get more fps and a good craphiqe

-novid (Removes Valve Video at start of game)
-tickrate 128 (Max tickrate)
-high (Sets CS:GO to High Priority)
-threads "x" (Fill in the amount of Cores your CPU has)
+mat_queue_mode 2 (May increase fps for some PCs)
-freq (Insert Monitors Refresh Rate)
+cl_forcepreload 1 (Will preload maps for smooth gamplay) 
-nod3d9ex (Faster Alt+Tab)
-nojoy (Removes joy stick)

Edited by eXpLoReRs
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14 hours ago, vIs^♚ said:

Hello, dear member Community , I will try to help you solve this problem and customize your settings games.

CS:GO has a variety of settings you can optimize to your advantage. But if you’re new to the game, these can seem overwhelming. Luckily for you, I have professional experience and will teach you how to set up the game for the maximum competitive advantage.

While this guide will disable some annoying things and help out your FPS,  it’s obvious that you have do your part as player to adapt to these changes and play around with them to see what works best for you. Much of this configuration is personal preference, but there are tweaks you can make to in-game graphics, Nvidia settings, key bindings, and more to help outplay the competition.

Let’s begin.

DETERMINE SCREEN RESOLUTION
I have played on every resolution setting and my personal favorite is 1680×1050. This makes the game slightly stretched to see models better and bigger without sacrificing the field of view. A majority of players play on 24in. monitors and these settings will have no problem, however, I’ve played on smaller monitors and these settings don’t work too well for  that.

If you’re playing CS:GO on a 17in. laptop you will probably be better off with 4:3 / 800×600 just so you can see the models. However, there is no “one true resolution” and that is why you have to play around with them and find what works best for you.

I have noticed that many professional players are using a 4:3 / 800×600 resolution but keep in mind that a majority of them are players from the 1.6 era like myself and are used to it. This setting allows players to hit very high FPS rates but it actually cuts down your field of view down to 74 degrees while a 16:9 configuration will have 90 degrees.

I’ve played on 4:3 for a while but I began to have tunnel vision and started to see obvious models on edges which were cut out by my small field of view. This can bother some players but it’s an excellent way to increase FPS.

OPTIMIZE LAUNCH OPTIONS
Not too many players know they can customize CS:GO launch options unless they are a hardcore gamer. If you haven’t done so already, changing these options will turn you into a CS:GO power user and by default also make you a better gamer. There are countless launch options to choose from but I’ll show you a screenshot of mine as well as provide you with a po[CENSORED]r option:

                                                       cs-go-launch-options-1.png?resize=612,60

My settings are based on a lot of trial and error but if you want to go with something easy, here are some po[CENSORED]r settings:

-novid -high -threads 4 -nojoy +cl_forcepreload 1 -nod3d9ex

Here is what these settings do:

“-novid” Skips Valve animation at launch
“-high” Prioritizes CS:GO  for CPU
“-threads 4” Dictates threads used by CPU (use 2 if you use a dual-core CPU)
“-nod3d9ex” Makes ALT+TAB faster
“-nojoy” Removes joystick support
“+cl_forcepreload 1” Increases FPS by preloading maps
Wow! That was a lot of things to go over and they may seem a little confusing. Don’t worry though, you only have to make these settings once and then spend your time playing CS:GO.

LOWER VIDEO SETTINGS
I’ll make this section as brief as possible: the lower the video settings are, the more FPS CS:GO will have. I know this may seem counter-intuitive if your PC’s hardware can max everything out, but you should keep in mind that this game is all about gameplay, not graphics!

Take a look at the screenshot of how I adjust my in-game settings:

cs-go-game-settings-1.png?resize=953,390

 

This is what these settings control:

Global Shadow Quality: There really isn’t much to this setting, however, there is a catch.  Shadow quality in this game is like the second most FPS-consuming setting.  If you want everything to look pretty, go high and play on low fps. You’ll also have the added perk of seeing shadows from players much further.  

Model / Texture Detail: This is the amount of detail every model in the game should have. It doesn’t consume much FPS from gaming rigs, but there isn’t a big difference between high and low.

Effect Detail: This controls how beautiful the game looks. This setting won’t change much in maps like “Dust II” which has no visual effects except for a few clouds and a burning car. However, I change this quite often depending on a map. On small compact maps I have it set to  low and on bigger maps I have it on high or medium. This is because this setting also detects how far from a player’s view it should start drawing models. So if you have it set to low on big maps that have distances, it will increase the chances of models appearing suddenly (popping-out).

Shader Detail: This is just useless and there is no other way of saying it. Basically, this controls  the look of tiles on the floor or reflections on the glass. On maps with windows (Nuke, Office. etc), you know the struggle of looking through reflections so you should always have this setting on low.

Multicore Rendering: This allows CS:GO to utilize more than one core from the CPU. More cores means more FPS so you’ll want this on.

Multisampling Anti-Aliasing Mode: This is the setting that eats all your FPS away. CS:GO doesn’t look that bad with it being off once you get used to it.  All it really does is just smooths the edges and makes textures look better and more realistic. If you have a good machine you can put it on 2X.

Texture Filtering Mode: This tells the system the difference between a texture when looking at it from far away or up close. Bilinear and trilinear has no significant difference in FPS. What it does do, however, is fix the boundaries of mipmaps (pixels) Anisotropic consumes a little more amount of FPS because it uses square mipmaps.

FXAA Anti-Aliasing: This also eats up quite a bit of FPS and should be turned off. What it does is essentially simple but it’s also a big amount of work because it has to find all the edges and smooth, every single one of them. This obviously makes game look better, but it’s also something you can play without.

Vertical Sync Players generally tell others to turn off Vertical Synchronization (VSync) to decrease the in-game lag but they are actually missing out an important feature of the game. Monitors have different refresh rates and these rates determine the number of times a screen refreshes itself in a second. What VSync does is prevent the video card to do anything to the current frame on screen until and unless the monitor completes its refresh cycle. During this small time, the video card either rapidly copies the off-screen graphics into display (Double Buffering) or simply switch between them or do both (Triple Buffering). Enabling it may cause input lag due to the time left in the refresh cycle to wind up. Disabling it may cause screen tearing in which two or more frames are drawn together at a moment.

Motion Blur Do yourself a favor and just leave this off. Trust me!

CONFIGURE GRAPHICS CARD
Last but not least on this list on how to optimize CS:GO is the graphics card. Not all graphics cards are the same so you’ll have to experiment a bit with this one. And depending on your GPU manufacturer, these settings may or may not be the same across the board.

Generally, you won’t want to change too many of these settings if you don’t know what they do. However, if you’re an experienced PC gamer, take a look at my Nvidia control panel for some ideas:

                  cs-go-nvidia-1-1.png?resize=890,507

                  cs-go-nvidia-2-1.png?resize=893,510

                  cs-go-nvidia-3-1.png?resize=799,672


                  cs-go-nvidia-4-1.png?resize=885,835

 

THE CHOICE IS YOURS
CS:GO (and every other PC video game) is all about having fun. I encourage you to take some of my suggestions and see for yourself how you like them. Ultimately, the choice is yours and it’s up to you to determine what helps you be a better player.

I hope this brief guide will dramatically help you improve your FPS and your gameplay experience. If you would like to see more about CS:GO (config builds, mouse sensitivity & DPI, keybindings, HUD customization, crosshairs, etc.), just let me know in the comments below. If you have any questions about CS:GO,  you can also contact me on PM.

Wow thanks for your help , ill try it later becuase i tried to reinstall cs,

Dont close the topic ill reply if it works or no when ill try it

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OPEN UP NVIDIA CONTROL PANEL

  • Firstly open up NVidia Control Panel by right clicking icon next your time stamp.
  • if you don’t have a NVidia Control Panel icon on the place so you must go to your Windows Control Panel > Display Settings > NVidia Control Panel
  • CS GO Fps is the issue, after you find the Manage 3D Settings. There is two side of application ” Global Settings ” and ” Program Settings “
  • For CS GO Fps it’s not much to do with Global Settings so we will be Tweaking CS GO under Program Settings.
  • Select Counter-Strike: Global Offensive > Under Program Settings.
  • İf there is no CS: GO under Program Settings, Go add by section and find the way to your cs go folder. it’s like this on my machine “ C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\SteamApps\common\Counter-Strike Global Offensive “

 

Tweaking NVidia Settings for Boosting CS GO FPS

There are 18 sections to select what to do. What are these sections for cs go fps and what are they related to. Contrary to common belief people sets all settings to be set off, off and off. This is not the graphic card developers up to. Why are we using drivers? If we will set the hole settings to off. There are some good sections to be set” On” for CS GO Fps…

CS GO FPS SETTINGS FOR NVIDIA

  •  
  • Ambient Occlusion – This option makes the edges brighter, in game if we need more fps. Set to ” Performance “
  • Anisotropic Filtering – is about image quality of surfaces. Set to” Application Control” we must set always to Application Control if it’s available in game.
  • Antialiasing FXAA – About smoothing edges. “ On “
  • Antialiasing Gamma Correction – Only supported 7800+ series. It makes color quality improvement. For CS GO FPS I recommend it to be ” On “
  • Antialiasing Mode – You already learned about Antialiasing. And this allows how Antialiasing will be used. Set to ” Application Control “
  • Antialiasing Setting – This is known as cascade effect and used to lowering this effect. High levels can reduce cs go fps. Set to ” Application Control “
  • Antialiasing Transparency – Improving transparent textures. Help CS GO Fps by Setting ” Multisampling “
  • CUDA – GPUs – Determination of which GPU will be used including PhysX system. Set to ” All or Can set to Primary Display “
  • Maximum pre-rendered frames – if you have a weak computer and a cpu this option will put too much on your cpu and must Set to ” 1 “
  • Multi-display/mixed-GPU acceleration – for more than 1 monitor usage it’s not for weak computers so must Set to ” Single display performance mode “
  • Power management mode – it’s not available in further updates. if you have so Set to ” Adaptive “
  • Preferred refresh rate – Refresh rate influences the game play so much and the cs go fps we must have at least 100 Hz for gaming. in all circumstances must Set to ” Highest Available “
  • Texture filtering – Anisotropic sample optimization – This section only works for the programs which are related to DirectX and works for the pixel edges to be nicer. For the best performance Set to ” On ”
  •  

    CS GO Settings

 

 

  • Texture filtering – Negative LOD bias – Improvement about cascades near edges. Set to ” Allow “
  • Texture filtering Quality – İts about to select Quality or Performance in game. What are we in CS:GO ? Of course ” Performance “
  • Texture filtering – Trilnear optimization – if you want the highest quality graphics and/or you are experiencing texture glitches you should set this option to Off. Set to “ On “
  • Threaded optimization – CS GO Fps needs multiple CPU s if have one or not Set to ” On “
  • Triple buffering – This is well done with if V-Sync is applied as On if not there is nothing to do much if you have low video card ram! you must turned it off strongly. Set to ” Off “
  • Vertical Sync – Prevents horizontal tearing by improving image quality, We need CS GO FPS to be on best Performance so Set to ” Off “

Or

see this video

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