Valve has added a new performance monitor to Steam that can help you understand why the game can run easily. According to a post, not only does it break the overall frame rate of a game, but it can tell you how many of these frames were developed by techniques like NVIDIA’s DLSS or AMD’s FSR.
This change has been added as a Steam Client updates that is now available, though Valve notes that this “first version” is focused on Windows users and the most common GPU hardware. “
The company says the new performance monitor currently offers details of four different levels: a single FPS value, FPS details, CPU and GPU use, and “FPS, CPU, GPU and RAM full details.” The more you choose to show, the maximum performance of your screen will be picked up by the monitor.
Earlier, the steam offered a simple FPS counter, but separating the frames made fully offered by your graphics cover can help you better understand the key differences and better understand the key differences. A detailed auxiliary document about the valve Performance Monitor states, “Frame Generation cannot help things like input Lativity that is important for competitive gamers, but it may look like things on today’s high refresh rate monitor.”
In practice, what it should mean is that you can see if your game is only running on 30 FPS because it’s really running on 30 FPS inside the game engine, though you are seeing a smooth picture of the “fake frames” including NVIDIA and AMD. (This is a whole debate in the PC gaming community, and it seems that the valve is not taking here.)
Valve has already given handheld gamers a taste of these sharp insights by making tools like Steam Deck and Minghad in Stamus, which allows you to monitor your CPU, graphics, RAM and carefully give rations to your battery life. But having a way to do this in the desktop steam will make insights more accessible to many gamers.
Valve says it plans to “detect some of the common bad hardware performance scenarios, and when you target the shift tab, you plan to add some additional pieces to the performance over the performance of your game, to show a major summary of your game performance in the overley.”
