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Jun 2 at 17:15 comment added Ramhound @Leo - Verify the cables support the highest HDMI or DisplayPort standards that the monitor and GPU support. 4K@144Hz will require the latest of both.
Jun 2 at 17:04 comment added Leo @Ramhound I've set both the "Global settings" "Max Frame Rate", as well as the "Refresh Rate" on Windows Settings as 120fps and rebooted. The stutter stopped. Thank you. I'll try to do some more testing later to see if I can narrow down what caused this.
Jun 2 at 16:45 comment added Leo @Daniel B There's an option on the monitor's menu (LG ultragear). If I set adaptive sync to "Off", the G-sync option on the Nvidia Control Panel disappears, as well as the "Variable Refresh Rate" option on Windows' Graphics Settings. I believe it's because the monitor presents itself as not compatible with VRR.
Jun 2 at 16:24 comment added Daniel B @Leo Not sure what you might be referring to. The display does not control the signal it receives. That’s the PC. In NVIDIA Control Panel, under “Set up G-SYNC”, I have two options: Full screen only or windowed and full screen. Which is selected on your system?
Jun 2 at 16:03 comment added Ramhound If you change the refresh rate of the monitor does it help the performance outside of an application. You can use Nvidia Control Panel to set the refresh rate within individual applications. I oddly suspect this issue is linked to the 144Hz refresh rate.
Jun 2 at 15:37 comment added Leo @Daniel_B I just tried changing this via the monitor. The issue persists on all three options (Extended, Basic and Off).
Jun 2 at 15:00 comment added Daniel B Do you have Variable Refresh Rate (G-Sync or whatever) enabled for your desktop?
Jun 2 at 14:34 history edited Leo CC BY-SA 4.0
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S Jun 2 at 14:30 review First questions
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S Jun 2 at 14:30 history asked Leo CC BY-SA 4.0