

If you’re looking for all the cowboy graphical bells and whistles, and are determined to hit 60fps in Red Dead Redemption 2 at 1080p, you’re going to need a serious GPU. How we miss the days of high, medium and low.


Rockstar gives you a ludicrous number of options to tweak, with 16 basic visual settings and a frankly nuts 21 separate quality presets. Holy hell does this Red Dead Redemption 2 have all the graphics settings on PC.
3440x1440p red dead redemption 2 Pc#
Still, we find switching from standard controls to ‘standard FPS’, which switches run from X/A to a click of the left stick, feels more natural.īasic Red Dead Redemption 2 PC settings tips Give standard FPS controls a shot – This is a subjective switch.Juggle your HUD options – Switch between the normal mini map, expanded viewpoint for extra guidance, stripped down compass view, or ditch the HUD entirely if you want to test your navigational wits for the most immersive experience.The ‘x2’ setting works best, letting you open chests much more quickly. Turn on tap assist – Give your digits a break and cut down on button bashing by enabling ‘tap assist’ from the controls menu.Enable first-person auto-centre – Find and enable this option from camera settings to make it easier to target enemies on horseback while playing in first-person.Trying to manually place shots on horseback is tougher than performing open heart surgery with a spatula. Use lock-on for horse shootouts – Keep the lock-on for mounts/vehicles set to normal.It’ll make you a more accurate gunslinger. Use free-aim for on-foot action – Arthur’s lock-on modes are a bit sticky, so switch to free-aim from the controls menu to give you more agency over where the cowboy’s bullets land.RDR2 boasts some of the most striking use of this contrast-boosting tech you’ll ever find. Enable HDR – If your screen supports it, make sure to enable HDR from display settings.Turn on ‘toggle to run’ – Save yourself the mild hassle of holding down the run button to make your outlaw’s sprints less tedious on your fingers with this time-saver in the controls menu.If anyone else have a similar graphicscard and screen setup as mine, please share your experience. I will give more updates as i try different options, in hope some of you can use it. But the flickering is gone now when its daytime, though i have noticed some flickering at night, i will try and see if i can get this fixed as well. Whenever a cutscene is on, the flickering is out of control. I tried the option to Resolution scale, so i set Resolution Scale to x0.8.00 (80%) And this helped with TAA being enabled and making it feel like 60 fps. I had to turn off V-sync and Triple Buffering since the flickering was getting worse somehow by those enabled, i dont really know why. Its only working on Vulkan, and i followed this guide optimize the graphics and it actually worked perfectly FPS Wise: Im having problems with flickering when TAA is disabled. I actually got it to work pretty well, though with TAA enabled it seems like 25fps instead of the 60fps it is actually doing. There are a tons of Problems, and i have searched the web far and wide for solution. Im trying to be able to play Red Dead Redemption 2 on my ultrawide monitor, with my 2x 1070ti SLI Setup.
