Forcing Windows 10/11 To Use Your Laptop NVIDIA GPU/eGPU
Forcing Windows 10/11 To Use Your Laptop NVIDIA GPU/eGPU
Most desktop and laptop computers come with two graphic cards – dedicated GPU such as Nvidia or AMD, and an integrated graphics unit if the motherboard has it. By default, an app or game will use the dedicated GPU if it exists. But somes game will still use the integrated graphics despite having a dedicated GPU.
This guide will show you how to switch between dedicated GPU or integrated graphics for any app or game in Windows 10 or Windows 11. You can also use this tutorial to force any app to run on Integrated graphics instead of dedicated GPU.
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
use your laptop gpu
use your laptop gpu adapter
use your laptop gpu ASUS
use your laptop gpu driver
Windows OS launched a new feature that allows games and apps to use the dedicated GPU instead of the Integrated Graphics Processor. This feature is also prevalent in the Windows 11. At the same time, most of the computers are equipped with two dedicated GPU along with a integrated graphics (Intel) unit if the motherboard supports the same.
This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Alienware, Razer, MSI, Huawei , Microsoft Surface, and Samsung.