Windows 10/11 Variable Refresh Rate on or Off
Windows 10/11 Variable Refresh Rate on or Off
A variable refresh rate (VRR) is the general term for a dynamic display refresh rate that can continuously and seamlessly vary on the fly, on displays that support variable refresh rate technologies. A display supporting a variable refresh rate usually supports a specific range of refresh rates (e.g. 30 Hertz through 144 Hertz). This is called the variable refresh rate range (VRR range). The refresh rate can continuously vary seamlessly anywhere within this range, even as a fraction.
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
variable refresh rate windows 10
variable refresh rate windows 11
variable refresh rate ASUS
what does variable refresh rate mean
how to enable variable refresh rate windows 10
variable refresh rate fps
variable refresh rate on or off for gaming
variable refresh rate gaming
variable refresh rate graphics settings
is variable refresh rate good
variable refresh rate in windows 10
should i use variable refresh rate windows 10
variable refresh rate laptop
variable refresh rate on or off windows 10
variable refresh rate on or off windows 11
variable refresh rate pc
variable refresh rate setting windows 10
The main purpose of any graphics card is to provide a buttery-smooth experience for gaming. To do this, a graphics card pushes images to your PC screen as fast as it can. However, most devices monitors refresh their image at a set rate. So, when the graphics card delivers frames outside the set schedule, the display screen shows a portion of one frame and the next frame onscreen simultaneously. This makes the image look distorted as it splits in two (Screen Tearing). This phenomenon only worsens with increasing dynamic frame rate of the game.
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, Huawei and Samsung.