Mastering Your Immortals of Aveum Gaming Experience: Best Settings Unveiled!

ThePetStuffs
4 min readAug 26, 2023

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Immortals of Aveum

Hey, fellow gamers! Are you diving into the world of Immortals of Aveum on your trusty gaming rig? You might not have a Steam Deck, but if you’ve got a decent PC, we’ve got some tips to make your journey even better.

Imagine being able to trade some flashy graphics for smoother performance — well, you totally can! Just tinker with the game’s graphics settings.

Now, here’s the cool part: Immortals of Aveum doesn’t follow the usual presets like most games. Instead, it lets you manually adjust settings like Low, High, or Ultra for each aspect. Think of it like hanging out with a bunch of quiet ghosts in a shared flat — no middle ground. But wait, there’s more!

There’s this nifty Performance Budget Tool that checks out your hardware and figures out how much your CPU and graphics card can handle.

Each setting gets a points value — fancier stuff costs more, while simpler stuff costs less. The tool then looks at your selected settings and compares them to your hardware’s budget. If it goes overboard, you get a friendly warning.

Sounds great, right? In theory, it is! It’d save me tons of time making guides if it worked perfectly. But here’s the scoop: In reality, it’s not that much help. Don’t get too hung up on its advice. Some settings it says to lower might not actually impact your performance that much.

Take my word for it, I tested it with an RTX 4060 on 1080p. Most settings, when dropped to Low from Ultra, didn’t give me even a single extra frame per second. But don’t worry, if your PC can handle the game at all, you can keep most settings on Ultra without a hitch.

That Performance Budget Tool can be a bit misleading, so don’t let it mess with your gaming mojo.

Best Settings For Immortals of Aveum Gaming Experience

Now, let’s keep things simple. Here’s the scoop on settings that you can safely keep on High or Ultra without affecting that sweet 49fps (frames per second) on the RTX 4060:

  • Texture quality
  • Visual effects quality
  • Shadow quality
  • Post-processing quality
  • Volumetric fog quality
  • Atmosphere quality
  • Depth of field quality
  • Foliage quality
  • Light shafts (keep these on)
  • Local exposure (keep it on)
  • Mesh quality
  • Motion blur quality (no Off switch, sadly)
  • Particle quality
  • Subsurface scattering quality
  • Mesh pool size
  • Shadow rendering pool size

Ready for the next level of tweaking? Here’s where you can make a difference:

1. DLSS

If your rig has Nvidia hardware, you can try DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling). It might sound fancy, but it can actually boost your frame rate. The balanced mode worked fine for me, pushing the RTX 4060 up to 81fps. The Quality mode, a bit sharper, gave me 72fps. Give it a shot, especially at higher resolutions.

2. Frame Generation

This one’s for RTX 40 series GPUs. Unless the UI glitches get sorted out, leave it alone. It can improve your fps — I got 105fps on the RTX 4060 by combining it with Quality DLSS — but it’s just not worth the visual bugs right now.

3. FSR 2

If you’re on AMD, Intel, or older Nvidia GPUs, this is your alternative to DLSS. Quality mode got me from 49fps to 69fps, so it’s pretty decent. Expect a bit more jagged edges though, so stick to Quality unless you have an older PC.

4. Global Illumination Quality

Sacrificing some of the new lighting effects boosted my fps from 49 to 56 on the RTX 4060. The quality difference? Not that noticeable, honestly.

5. Reflection Quality

Only a tiny gain here — just one extra frame per second. But hey, every frame counts, right?

6. Ambient Occlusion Quality

Lowering this only got me to 50fps on average, but it’s still something.

7. Anisotropic Filtering

Turning this off gave me 1fps more. Small steps, people!

8. Shadow Mesh Quality

Surprise, surprise! Dropping to Low gave me 50fps again. Can we get a different number for a change?

9. Shadow Resolution Quality

Low quality pushed me up to 52fps this time. Progress!

10. Render Target Pool Size

Lowering the target pool size from 1000 to 200 brought me back to 50fps. Stability boost, anyone?

Immortals of Aveum’s best settings

So, what’s the takeaway? The best settings for Immortals of Aveum are about squeezing out those tiny gains, and a few big improvements too. When you’re struggling to hit 60fps, even one frame can make a difference. Here’s the easy version of my suggestions:

  • Global Illumination Quality: Go Low
  • Reflection Quality: Go Low
  • Anisotropic Filtering: Turn it Off
  • Ambient Occlusion Quality: Go Low
  • Shadow Mesh Quality: Go Low
  • Shadow Resolution Quality: Go Low
  • Render Target Pool Size: Set it to 200

Without upscaling, my RTX 4060 jumped from 49fps to 63fps. Add in Balanced DLSS and you’re looking at a slick 88fps.

For folks without DLSS, FSR 2 on Quality is a great option at higher resolutions. Just beware of some sharpness loss compared to Nvidia’s version. But hey, if it helps tame this PC-hungry beast of a game, why not give it a shot? Get out there and conquer Immortals of Aveum like the gaming legend you are! 🎮🔥

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Thanks for today!

Tada.

Originally published at HillTechies.

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