I recently downloaded shaders for 1.7.10 with optifine. But when I starte to py with shaders, I got SERIOUS lag (around 15 fps) I have tried everything to stop it like:
Paying with lowest settings
using lite shaderpacks
playing minecraft on a smaller resolution
setting the priority to high on the task manager
turning the renderresmul and shadowresmul settings to the lowest possible number
I recently downloaded shaders for 1.7.10 with optifine. But when I starte to py with shaders, I got SERIOUS lag (around 15 fps) I have tried everything to stop it like:
Paying with lowest settings
using lite shaderpacks
playing minecraft on a smaller resolution
setting the priority to high on the task manager
turning the renderresmul and shadowresmul settings to the lowest possible number
applying 2GB of RAM to minecraft
pc specs:
Windows 7 Home preminum (64 bit)
Intel core i3 processor
4.00GB RAM
Intel HD graphics card
I will appreciate any help that is given
thanks! -Iggy2412
Honesly, with an Intel GPU, you're lucky to get 15 FPS.
Shaders are very intensive on your system. Computers which gets over 100 FPS (even 200 FPS), modded even, will get dragged down to 30 FPS and most of the time lower, when shaders are installed.
What FPS do you get normally? Without any mods, pure vanilla. If it's under at least 80+ FPS, then I'm afraid your system will not handle shaders any better.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Author of the Clarity, Serenity, Sapphire & Halcyon shader packs for Minecraft: Java Edition.
Honesly, with an Intel GPU, you're lucky to get 15 FPS.
Shaders are very intensive on your system. Computers which gets over 100 FPS (even 200 FPS), modded even, will get dragged down to 30 FPS and most of the time lower, when shaders are installed.
What FPS do you get normally? Without any mods, pure vanilla. If it's under at least 80+ FPS, then I'm afraid your system will not handle shaders any better.
As grimallq pointed out, Intel GPUs are honestly the worst decision for a GPU when wanting to play with shaders. As I said in my previous post, you're lucky to get 15 FPS, I have heard many times that most shaders just flat up break on Intel cards, giving black screens, render errors, or even crashing.
15 FPS is not [i]that[/b] bad. I used to play at that framerate. Once it drops down below 10 FPS is where you really should be panicking because you don't get a good framerate. If you really want more FPS though, your best option is to bite the bullet and upgrade your rig. Get a newer, more powerful GPU. One that isn't Intel.
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Author of the Clarity, Serenity, Sapphire & Halcyon shader packs for Minecraft: Java Edition.
As grimallq pointed out, Intel GPUs are honestly the worst decision for a GPU when wanting to play with shaders. As I said in my previous post, you're lucky to get 15 FPS, I have heard many times that most shaders just flat up break on Intel cards, giving black screens, render errors, or even crashing.
15 FPS is not that bad. I used to play at that framerate. Once it drops down below 10 FPS is where you really should be panicking because you don't get a good framerate. If you really want more FPS though, your best option is to bite the bullet and upgrade your rig. Get a newer, more powerful GPU. One that isn't Intel.
Eventually, I plan to get my own computer (my whole family uses this one) someday and I will definitely make sure it's graphics card will be compatible with shaders. Anyway, thanks for hping me understand why I am getting so much lag!
Paying with lowest settings
using lite shaderpacks
playing minecraft on a smaller resolution
setting the priority to high on the task manager
turning the renderresmul and shadowresmul settings to the lowest possible number
applying 2GB of RAM to minecraft
pc specs:
Windows 7 Home preminum (64 bit)
Intel core i3 processor
4.00GB RAM
Intel HD graphics card
I will appreciate any help that is given
thanks! -Iggy2412
Honesly, with an Intel GPU, you're lucky to get 15 FPS.
Shaders are very intensive on your system. Computers which gets over 100 FPS (even 200 FPS), modded even, will get dragged down to 30 FPS and most of the time lower, when shaders are installed.
What FPS do you get normally? Without any mods, pure vanilla. If it's under at least 80+ FPS, then I'm afraid your system will not handle shaders any better.
Author of the Clarity, Serenity, Sapphire & Halcyon shader packs for Minecraft: Java Edition.
My Github page.
The entire Minecraft shader development community now has its own Discord server! Feel free to join and chat with all the developers!
Without shaders, I get 100-150 fps
As grimallq pointed out, Intel GPUs are honestly the worst decision for a GPU when wanting to play with shaders. As I said in my previous post, you're lucky to get 15 FPS, I have heard many times that most shaders just flat up break on Intel cards, giving black screens, render errors, or even crashing.
15 FPS is not [i]that[/b] bad. I used to play at that framerate. Once it drops down below 10 FPS is where you really should be panicking because you don't get a good framerate. If you really want more FPS though, your best option is to bite the bullet and upgrade your rig. Get a newer, more powerful GPU. One that isn't Intel.
Author of the Clarity, Serenity, Sapphire & Halcyon shader packs for Minecraft: Java Edition.
My Github page.
The entire Minecraft shader development community now has its own Discord server! Feel free to join and chat with all the developers!
I have tried using the lagless shader and it actually is slower than most shaderpacks on my computer
Eventually, I plan to get my own computer (my whole family uses this one) someday and I will definitely make sure it's graphics card will be compatible with shaders. Anyway, thanks for hping me understand why I am getting so much lag!