FPS Calculator for Gaming Performance
Not sure what number you should be aiming for? Read what FPS do you need for gaming first, then come back and run yours.
Understanding FPS in Gaming
Your FPS depends on the GPU, CPU, resolution, settings, and game engine working together against the ceiling your monitor sets. For the bigger question of what number you should be targeting in the first place, read what FPS do you need for gaming.
What Each Part Does
GPU: Handles rendering work including lighting, textures, shadows, and effects. More powerful cards like the NVIDIA RTX 4090 or AMD RX 7900 XTX render complex scenes at higher frame rates. VRAM stores textures and models, with modern games requiring 8-16GB for high settings.
CPU: Manages game logic, physics, AI, and draw calls that instruct the GPU. Weak processors can bottleneck powerful graphics cards. Our CPU bottleneck calculator helps identify processor limitations.
RAM: Modern games need 16GB for optimal performance, with 32GB recommended for multitasking. Insufficient RAM causes stuttering. Faster memory (3200MHz+) provides better frame rates in CPU-limited scenarios.
Storage: SSDs load data faster than HDDs, reducing loading screens and improving asset streaming. NVMe SSDs provide the fastest performance for games with DirectStorage technology.
Why Resolution Matters Most
Resolution is the biggest lever on performance. At 1080p with 2.1 million pixels, modern GPUs run most games comfortably. At 1440p the pixel count jumps to 3.7 million, and at 4K it reaches 8.3 million, which is why even flagship cards buckle at max settings. Dropping from 4K to 1440p can roughly double your FPS.
Which Settings Cost the Most
Texture Quality: Requires more VRAM but minimal FPS impact if you have sufficient memory. Most 8GB+ GPUs handle High/Ultra textures easily.
Shadow Quality: Ultra shadows can reduce FPS by 15-25% compared to Medium with minimal visual difference. Reducing from Ultra to High provides excellent performance gains.
Anti-Aliasing: Traditional MSAA/SSAA significantly reduce FPS. Modern TAA and FXAA provide good results with minimal performance cost.
Ambient Occlusion: SSAO provides basic quality with moderate cost. HBAO+ and VXAO improve visuals but reduce FPS by 10-15%.
Volumetric Effects: Fog, clouds, and god rays heavily impact performance. Reducing from Ultra to Medium improves FPS by 10-20%.
Ray Tracing and Upscaling
Ray tracing simulates realistic lighting but reduces FPS by 30-50%. Only RTX 30/40-series and AMD RX 6000/7000-series cards support hardware ray tracing. DLSS (NVIDIA) and FSR (AMD) use AI upscaling to boost frame rates by 30-60% while maintaining visual quality. Combining ray tracing with DLSS or FSR allows realistic lighting at playable frame rates.
Optimization Tips
Update Drivers: NVIDIA GeForce Experience and AMD Adrenalin provide automatic updates. Latest drivers often improve FPS by 5-15% in new games.
Close Background Apps: Web browsers, streaming software, and voice chat consume resources. Close unnecessary programs before gaming.
Enable Game Mode: Windows Game Mode prioritizes gaming performance by allocating more resources to games.
Monitor Temperatures: CPUs throttle at 95-100C, GPUs at 80-90C. Ensure adequate cooling, and if your case airflow is weak, follow our fan placement and airflow guide to improve fan placement and pressure balance.
Check Overall System Health: If frame rates still look wrong after checking temperatures and drivers, CIB PC Reporter can pull thermals, driver status, storage health, and other Windows 11 diagnostics into one exportable report.
Adjust Settings: Lower shadow quality, reduce ambient occlusion, disable volumetric effects, and lower draw distance for 20-40% FPS gains.
Enable DLSS/FSR: Use upscaling technologies if supported. Enable Reflex (NVIDIA) or Anti-Lag (AMD) to reduce input latency.
Consider Upgrades: GPU upgrades provide biggest performance gains. Our PC upgrade path tool helps identify cost-effective improvements.
Before committing to new hardware, verify your power supply can handle it with the PSU calculator.