Thursday, March 28, 2024

The best settings for Elden Ring: PC performance guide

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Elden Ring is an early hit for 2022, at least on consoles. The game just passed the Mostly Positive mark on Steam after being review bombed on release day for poor performance. The PC port, as is typical of From Software, has some problems. To get the most out of it, we ran a range of Elden Ring benchmarks to find the best settings.

Contents

  • The best settings for Elden Ring
  • Elden Ring system requirements
  • Elden Ring PC benchmarks, tested
  • A note on PC performance

The game still has some performance problems, and it calls for a recent PC. With a few settings optimizations, though, you can get Elden Ring looking how you want while still hitting the frame rate cap.

The best settings for Elden Ring

After testing all of the settings individually, here are the best settings for Elden Ring:

  • Texture quality: Medium
  • Antialiasing quality: Low
  • SSAO: Medium
  • Depth of field: Off
  • Motion blur: Off
  • Shadow quality: High
  • Lighting quality: Medium
  • Effects quality: Medium
  • Volumetric quality: High
  • Reflection quality: High
  • Water surface quality: Low
  • Shadow quality: Medium
  • Global illumination quality: High
  • Grass quality: High

We’re handling Elden Ring differently than a lot of other games we write performance guides for. Like every previous From Software release on PC, Elden Ring is capped at 60 frames per second (fps). That makes testing with different cards tough, as a lot of modern rigs can easily hit the cap.

There should eventually be a mod that disables the cap, as has been the case with Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice and Dark Souls 3. These unofficial mods aren’t easy to drum up, though. From Software games usually have physics and other things tied to the frame rate, so uncapping will probably break the game.

Instead of platonic performance, we put together a PC using midrange parts from a few years ago — a Ryzen 7 1700X, an 8GB RX 580, and 16GB of RAM. This is actually below From Software’s recommended spec, but we were still able to manage a playable frame rate at 1440p with setting tweaks and a full 60 fps at 1080p with the Medium preset.

The two biggest wins are depth of field and motion blur. You should turn both of them off. They don’t look great, and they both have a performance impact. It’s possible they’re causing stuttering in the game, too, so leave them off.

Image quality comparison in Elden Ring. Maximum is on the left, and Low is on the right.

Otherwise, basically every option will increase your performance. There aren’t too many free settings. We compromised and left shadow, reflection, global illumination, and volumetric quality at high, just for visual purposes. If you’re looking for extra performance, pay attention to the batch of settings from shadow to reflection quality. Those are the most important.

At 1440p, we went from an average of 29 fps at the Maximum preset to 37 fps with my optimized settings. Not bad. To be clear, you shouldn’t play Elden Ring at 1440p with a rig like the one we used. We just used 1440p for testing to get around the 60 fps cap.

Elden Ring system requirements

Elden Ring has some demanding system requirements, far higher than its visual quality would suggest. Although you can get away with an older GPU from the lower end, the CPU and RAM requirements are high. You can get by with 8GB of RAM, but we recommend sticking with 16GB considering the issues the game already has with stuttering.

Minimum
Recommended
CPU
AMD Ryzen 3 3300X
Intel Core i5-8400
AMD Ryzen 5 3600X
Intel Core i7-8700K
GPU
AMD Radeon RX 580 4GB
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 3GB
AMD Radeon RX Vega 56 8GB
Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 8GB
RAM
12GB
16GB
Storage
60GB
60GB
OS
Windows 10 or 11
Windows 10 or 11

The CPU requirements are most interesting. We don’t usually see games call for such recent processors. Even the PC port of God of War only calls for an Intel Core i5-2500K, which is six generations behind the Core i5-8400. The issue seems to be how many threads older generations of Intel processors have.

Older Intel i5 processors don’t have hyperthreading, and the Core i5-8400 is the first Intel i5 model with six cores. The Ryzen 3 3300X only has four cores, but it has hyperthreading, offering up a total of eight threads. All of this is to say: Don’t believe the system requirements. Based on our testing, it’s more important that you have at least six threads than you have a processor from the last few generations.

The CPU requirements are too high, and the GPU requirements are too low. Even with an 8GB RX 580, we were struggling to hit 60 fps at 1080p. The 4GB model would run into more issues. Elden Ring is at its best with 8GB of video memory, though something like a 6GB GTX 1060 would work, too.

Elden Ring PC benchmarks, tested

For Elden Ring benchmarks, you can see our results at 1440p above. We tested the 8GB RX 580, a Ryzen 7 1700X, and 16GB of RAM, and we wouldn’t recommend this configuration for 1440p. This is a better rig for 1080p, but we tested at the higher resolution to get past the frame-rate cap.

The presets scale well, and if you want an easy win, jumping to the Medium preset results in a 40% performance improvement. Our optimized settings are less of an improvement — around 31% over the Maximum preset — but it includes quite a few more settings at High.

In addition to the RX 580, we tested Elden Ring on a personal rig with an RTX 3090, 32GB of RAM, and a Core i9-10900K. We didn’t bother making a graph for this rig because there’s nothing to report. At 4K regardless of preset, I hit the 60 fps cap. Elden Ring has a narrow performance window; either you hit 60 fps or you don’t.

The good news from the results is that you have plenty of bandwidth to reach 60 fps. There are some settings that destroy image quality — shadow quality and SSAO, in particular. If you cut in some other areas, though, you can hit the cap at the resolution meant for your graphics card.

Outside of the average frame rate, we also included the 1% lows for reference. This is an average of the lowest 1% of frames, and it’s a good indicator of performance consistency. There are some big gaps with Elden Ring, which isn’t a surprise. The game has a stuttering problem. What’s interesting is that the 1% lows are much higher than they should be considering that problem.

We noted the 0.1% lows in the benchmarks — an average of an even smaller set of frames — and almost all of the results were in the single digits. Elden Ring has stuttering problems, but they don’t stay around for too long. You’ll hit a brief wall of maybe a second or two and then the game will smooth out.

A note on PC performance

At the time of publication, Elden Ring has some serious performance issues on PC. It doesn’t matter what hardware you have or what settings you run at, you will encounter stutters in the game right now. From Software has promised a patch soon, but it’s not available yet.

The issue comes down to shader compilation and loading zones. Basically, the game has what some call a just-in-time (JIT) rendering system. The problem right now is that it’s not quite in time, resulting in stutters as the engine loads a new zone or streams in new assets. There’s no way around this problem right now, so don’t look to performance optimizations to fix it.

There’s also an issue with the game that will cause it to bypass your graphics card for certain workloads, resulting in lower performance. From Software has already issued a patch for this issue, so make sure to update your game if you’re still encountering problems.

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