Here are some of the most useful (in my opinion) features; Frame-Rate Target Control (FRTC) This can be used to globally cap your framerate, good for preventing tearing and reducing power. Set this to 1fps lower than your FreeSync range for the best experience. Radeon Anti-Lag: This reduces latency dramatically and contrary to some folks beliefs, and unlike Nvidia Reflex, Anti-Lag works with all titles. Fantastic setting to keep enabled globally. Also, Anti-Lag+ is coming soon which improves upon this feature. Radeon Chill: This allows you to set a minimum & maximum framerate either globally, or on a per-game basis and is incredibly useful as a way to reduce power draw and temperatures. I find it works best in slower paced titles, such as BG3. If you don't touch your mouse or keyboard, it only runs the game at the minimum FPS specified. The moment you touch something, performance goes right back up to whatever you set as your maximum framerate. Enhanced Sync: This is a generally superior V-Sync alternative that also reduces input lag rather than increasing it, like traditional V-Sync tends to. A great way to prevent tearing or just increase how smooth/responsive a game feels. Works with FreeSync and Anti-Lag, too. Radeon Boost: This works by using DRS to scale a games resolution to what you prefer (50%, 66%, 83%) - similar to Chill, it responds to your input. When you're moving your mouse around a lot and there's more demand on the GPU, it dynamically drops the resolution to maintain higher framerates. When the opposite is happening, it scales your resolution back up. Radeon Image Sharpening: This is one of the best features and something I highly recommend everybody try. This uses Contrast Adaptive Sharpening (RCAS) to sharpen the areas of the game that are more blurry, and doesn't sharpen (or not as much) areas that don't require it. It works on a global or per-game basis, but I prefer keeping a global setting of 10%. So there's an admittedly somewhat long list of what, in my opinion, are the best features RSX has to offer. But there's much more, so take a look around. Radeon ReLive is fantastic. The advisors tab is great to see frametime graphs and performance in games. List goes on. One last thing I want to mention, is go to the "Gaming" tab and under "Graphics" scroll down, click "Advanced Settings" and set Texture Filtering Quality to "High" -- this costs nothing and improves the quality of anisotropic filtering. Hope this was helpful! Answer from ayylmaonade on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/optimizedgaming › amd - optimized adrenaline settings for smooth gameplay
r/OptimizedGaming on Reddit: AMD - Optimized Adrenaline settings for smooth gameplay
April 12, 2025 -

Hey, recently got a 9070 XT (upgraded from my 3070) and I've been testing amd stuff and It's amazing how well adrenaline have everything you ever need.

This guide is to make sure your games have the best balance between frametimes, input lag and NO MICROSTUTTERS as much as possible. This is a general applied setting for all games but in case a specific game reacts badly you can edit per game profile too.

Overall screenshot of how the settings should look like, explanation below:

Step 3 - In case you have a RDNA4 card you can enable FSR4 on a driver level, any game with fsr 3.1 will automatically load fsr4 instead. This is also controled by amd with driver updates.

Step 4 - Anti-lag reduces input lag overall specially in situations your GPU is maxed out at 100%. Some games might react bad to this but I have yet to find any.

Step 5 and 6 - This is purely subjective but I found image sharpening at 70% in games with TAA to be a workaround of having a sharper image.

Step 7 - This is the equivalent of nvidia fastsync. It reduces tearing\eliminates it without causing input lag. It's not as effective as vsync but if you care about input lag this should be on, otherwise just turn on vsync (and off in games always).

Step 8 - Framelimit directly at a driver level by amd. You should always cap your fps 4 fps BELOW YOUR MONITOR REFRESH RATE. In my Case its 116 since my monitor is 120hz. Why? So it stays inside the freesync range and vsync doesn't get triggered, preventing inputlag and frametime spikes.

FAQ

- Why not use AMD CHILL to cap fps?
AMD CHILL only applies correctly if you do per-game individually. A lot of games won't detected if enabled globally. Acording to research it seems amd chill does some kind of game-injection that some engines reject. Frame-rate Target-Control seems to work more consistently in my experience.

- What should I disable first when a game behaves weirdly?
DIsable anti-lag then enhanced Sync

- What if a game has a built-in framerate limiter?
Some games, while rare, have problematic built in limiters but when it's well done it works better than the global setting. So this should be the priority: IN-GAME FPS LIMITER - AMD FRAMELIMITER \ RTSS. Some games only lets you choose pre-determined values like 30-60-100-120-200+ FPS and not a specific value. In this case put it off \ unlimited and use the amd one, since they wont be optimized to use the -4 fps rule.

- Is RTSS safe to use if I don't want to use Adrenaline?
Yes its safe and it seems to be the more consistent in terms of applying the limit\async. Practically works on every game, you just have to set it up correctly and have it run on the background (Disable Enhanced Sync \ forced vsync in adrenaline or else you will get frametime issues)

Enjoy and comment your experience bellow. In case you have more tips let me know too :), this was purely me testing as I am extremely sensitive to motion smoothness.

-----------------

## Special thanks to Elliove and Dat_Boi_John for some additional information, crucial to this guide. Will update accordingly.

Top answer
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This is a decent guide. However, I have some things to add and to ask. Enhanced Sync and Fast Sync are in fact VSync as well, as in - they prevent visible tearing by not letting the front buffer (containing the current image) change, when monitor is displaying an image already. The difference is that typical VSync uses first-in-first-out queue for frame buffers, and Enhanced Sync uses last-in-first-out. That means that the frames that didn't meet the timing between refreshes get discarded instead of waiting in line to be shown, and that's why it doesn't limit FPS, and why input latency can be lower than VSync with triple buffering, as Enhanced Sync is equivalent to OpenGL's type of triple buffering. Anti-Lag works exaclty like you said, but you're still left with at least one frame of input lag. And to reduce input lag there, you have to use smart frame rate limiting - which means your FPS should never be limited by maxed out GPU. So not letting GPU max out in the first place is always better than fixing it with Anti-Lag. The popular recommendations like -3 and -4 FPS below refresh rate can be misleading because of diminishing returns. You're talking flat numbers, but frame times relative to FPS change exponentially. Say, difference between 116 FPS and 120 FPS is 0.28ms, while difference between 236 FPS and 240 FPS is 0.07ms - it's 4 times easier to miss the frame time VRR window then! And what matters to keeping VRR enanged at all times is not FPS, but frame times, so each single frame manages to get into the time window. So ideally, one should always take into account the refresh rate as well. A really good formula, used by Special K, is refresh-(refresh*refresh/3600), so, say for 240Hz screen a good number to limit at will be 224. You said you tried RTSS extensively, but you didn't mention what specific limiting you've tried. RTSS has front edge sync (prioritizes frame time stability), back edge sync (prioritizes input latency), and async (a balanced mode, leaning towards back edge sync). Secondly, disabling passive waiting significantly increases the precision of RTSS limiters. And last, but not least - never let FPS limiters fight over a game; ideally use one limiter or another, but two at the same time can lead to all sorts of issues. Since you mentioned FSR - you can also change DLSS/XeSS/FSR 3 to FSR 4 via OptiScaler. And for people on cards without FSR 4 support - XeSS is the next best thing, definitely better than FSR 3. Have you tried Special K? They say, its FPS limiter is unbeatable, ie. not that long ago, Digital Foundry said that SK's limiter was the only one being able to properly pace in Lossless Scaling FrameGen scenario. Plus, SK has AutoVRR mode, that configures things automatically for VRR users, including calculation of optimal FPS limit via the formula I mentioned earlier. And for non-VRR users like myself, it's got Latent Sync - it removes tearing without VSync's input latency, while also properly pacing frames, and allows reducing latency even further. I use it in Touhou (simple game, has to be locked to 60 FPS because game speed is tied to FPS) to get the same input latency as with 1000 FPS. Additional info on in-game vs external limiters. Modern games run input/simulation on a separate thread, while any external limiter can only alter the rendering thread. This is why, when the in-game limiter is made well, it can reduce latency further than any external limiter. But, as you said yourself, in-game ones tend to suck in more ways than one. The weirdest thing about them is when they limit to wrong FPS. Imagine me trying to enjoy AC: Odyssey on RX 480 with decent graphics - had to limit to 30 FPS, but ingame limiter limited to 31 instead, and external limiters had much more input latency. Had to OC my monitor to 62Hz for that single game shm.
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I wouldn't use frame rate target control (FRTC) as it has worse latency than chill. Chill's developer commented on the comparison between the two and said Chill has both lower latency and more stable frametimes. FRTC is essentially a legacy features. RTSS frame limiting works fine on my 7800xt. If you set both AMD Chill limits to the same value, then it provides the exact same latency and frame time smoothness as RTSS. Obviously it's still always better to cap using the game's own limiter if available, but otherwise RTSS and AMD Chill are functionally equivalent and are strictly better than FRTC. The strength of Radeon Image Sharpening is subjective but I personally like 40% at 1440p. Anything more and I start to see over sharpening artifacts on most games. As a last note, I'd suggest looking up the Optiscaler mod and installing it on every singleplayer game to replace DLSS upscaling and frame generation with FSR (3 or 4 depending on your card).
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AMD
amd.com › https://www.amd.com/en.html › resources › configure amd radeon™ settings for ultimate gaming experience
Configure AMD Radeon™ Settings for Ultimate Gaming Experience
April 3, 2024 - Texture Filtering Quality has a small impact on performance and image quality, which makes the default setting of Standard the preferred option for the optimal gaming experience. Surface Format Optimization enables the graphics driver to change ...
People also ask

Should I use Radeon Super Resolution or in-game FSR?
Always prefer a game's built-in FSR when it has one, because it produces a cleaner image with fewer artifacts. RSR is the fallback for older games that never received native FSR support. Treat RSR as a universal compatibility option rather than the first choice.
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pcgamecheck.com
pcgamecheck.com › home › blog › best amd adrenalin settings for gaming in 2026
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for Gaming in 2026 | PC Game Check
Does Radeon Chill reduce my competitive performance?
It can. Chill varies your framerate based on activity, and that variation slightly changes input feel from moment to moment. For ranked shooters you want a rock-steady framerate, so leave Chill off there. For single-player and casual play its power and noise savings are well worth it.
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pcgamecheck.com
pcgamecheck.com › home › blog › best amd adrenalin settings for gaming in 2026
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for Gaming in 2026 | PC Game Check
Is undervolting safe for my GPU?
Yes, undervolting is one of the safest tweaks you can make because you're lowering voltage, not raising it. The worst case is instability or a crash, which you fix by easing the undervolt back. It won't damage the card. Always stress-test for stability before trusting it in long sessions.
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pcgamecheck.com
pcgamecheck.com › home › blog › best amd adrenalin settings for gaming in 2026
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for Gaming in 2026 | PC Game Check
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AMD
amd.com › https://www.amd.com/en.html › resources › customize graphics settings with amd software: adrenalin edition
Customize Graphics Settings with AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition
March 3, 2025 - Enabling this setting requires a system reboot for changes to take effect. GPU Workload - Changes the tuning of memory parameters to better suit different types of workloads. For more information, please refer to article: Optimize GPU Performance for Computing Applications with AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition · Reset Shader Cache – Shader cache allows for faster loading times in games and reduced CPU usage by compiling and storing frequently used game shaders, rather than regenerating them each time they are needed.
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PC Outlet
pcoutlet.com › parts › video-cards › what-are-the-best-settings-for-amd-radeon-adrenalin
What Are The Best Settings For AMD Radeon Adrenalin? - PC Outlet
September 18, 2024 - To fine-tune your GPU for the best balance between performance and visual quality, the AMD Radeon Adrenalin Edition offers plenty of settings to tweak. Let’s dive into the specifics to ensure your gaming sessions run smoothly and look fantastic. Under the Global Graphics tab, you’ll want to customize a few options for an optimal experience across all games.
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PC Game Check
pcgamecheck.com › home › blog › best amd adrenalin settings for gaming in 2026
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for Gaming in 2026 | PC Game Check
19 hours ago - The best AMD Adrenalin (Radeon Software) settings for gaming in 2026: Anti-Lag, Radeon Boost, Chill, Image Sharpening and more, explained to maximize FPS.
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Dignitas
dignitas.gg › articles › best-amd-settings-for-fps-on-laptop-and-pc
Best AMD Settings For FPS On Laptop And PC | Dignitas
December 14, 2025 - The Best AMD Settings For FPS On Laptop And PC are a mix of driver tweaks, Windows tuning, and in game choices that focus on responsiveness instead of eye candy. In this guide you will set up a performance first AMD profile, clean up latency, and apply a repeatable path that works on both desktop and laptop, without needing to be a full time technician. Your AMD Software Adrenalin global profile is the base layer for every game.
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/amd › what are your go-to (or must avoid) adrenalin gfx settings?
r/Amd on Reddit: What are your go-to (or must avoid) Adrenalin GFX settings?
September 1, 2023 -

Just made the switch to AMD, thing are going (mostly) great so far! I noticed a handful of settings in the Graphics tab of Adrenalin (RSR, Anti-lag, Chill etc.) and was wondering if any cause issues to you longer time AMD users.

I'm a bit new to all of this, I appreciate any information!

Top answer
1 of 33
143
Here are some of the most useful (in my opinion) features; Frame-Rate Target Control (FRTC) This can be used to globally cap your framerate, good for preventing tearing and reducing power. Set this to 1fps lower than your FreeSync range for the best experience. Radeon Anti-Lag: This reduces latency dramatically and contrary to some folks beliefs, and unlike Nvidia Reflex, Anti-Lag works with all titles. Fantastic setting to keep enabled globally. Also, Anti-Lag+ is coming soon which improves upon this feature. Radeon Chill: This allows you to set a minimum & maximum framerate either globally, or on a per-game basis and is incredibly useful as a way to reduce power draw and temperatures. I find it works best in slower paced titles, such as BG3. If you don't touch your mouse or keyboard, it only runs the game at the minimum FPS specified. The moment you touch something, performance goes right back up to whatever you set as your maximum framerate. Enhanced Sync: This is a generally superior V-Sync alternative that also reduces input lag rather than increasing it, like traditional V-Sync tends to. A great way to prevent tearing or just increase how smooth/responsive a game feels. Works with FreeSync and Anti-Lag, too. Radeon Boost: This works by using DRS to scale a games resolution to what you prefer (50%, 66%, 83%) - similar to Chill, it responds to your input. When you're moving your mouse around a lot and there's more demand on the GPU, it dynamically drops the resolution to maintain higher framerates. When the opposite is happening, it scales your resolution back up. Radeon Image Sharpening: This is one of the best features and something I highly recommend everybody try. This uses Contrast Adaptive Sharpening (RCAS) to sharpen the areas of the game that are more blurry, and doesn't sharpen (or not as much) areas that don't require it. It works on a global or per-game basis, but I prefer keeping a global setting of 10%. So there's an admittedly somewhat long list of what, in my opinion, are the best features RSX has to offer. But there's much more, so take a look around. Radeon ReLive is fantastic. The advisors tab is great to see frametime graphs and performance in games. List goes on. One last thing I want to mention, is go to the "Gaming" tab and under "Graphics" scroll down, click "Advanced Settings" and set Texture Filtering Quality to "High" -- this costs nothing and improves the quality of anisotropic filtering. Hope this was helpful!
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I ALWAYS cap my FPS to whatever low it drops to in a particular game. Saves heat, noise, power, and produces a more consistent experience while also saving some GPU overhead for in game spikes in rendering load. I avoid chill but just because I don't like fluctuations.
Find elsewhere
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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
Best AMD Control Adrenalin Settings for Gaming & Performance in 2025 - 2025 Optimization Guide📈 - YouTube
Optimizing AMD Adrenalin Settings, lower input lag, Max FPS & Visuals on your AMD GPUThe guide shows you to optimize best AMD Adrenalin settings, fix low fps...
Published   December 15, 2025
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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
AMD Adrenalin | Best Settings (2025) - YouTube
In this video, I bring to you, one of the so much requested videos of how AMD's software works and what is essentially the best global settings for gaming an...
Published   July 8, 2025
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PcHardwarePro
pchardwarepro.com › amd adrenalin: key settings to maximize gaming performance
AMD Adrenalin: Essential settings for smooth gaming
January 12, 2026 - In this guide you will find a detailed, but very down-to-earth explanation of what really matters in Adrenalin: How to configure Anti-Lag, Enhanced Sync, FSR, FPS limiters, Chill, and other critical features to achieve the best possible combination ...
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Technetbook
technetbooks.com › home › software
Best AMD Radeon Adrenalin Settings for Gaming | Technetbook
November 28, 2024 - Integer Scaling: Best for pixel art and retro games. GPU Clock Speed: Increase for more performance (use cautiously). Memory Clock: Increasing can boost performance in some scenarios (use cautiously). Power Limit: Raising the limit allows for higher clocks but increases power consumption and heat. Keep your drivers updated through the Adrenalin software's Home tab for optimal performance and compatibility.
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Sportskeeda
sportskeeda.com › home › gaming tech › 5 best amd adrenalin settings for high performance
5 best AMD Adrenalin settings for high performance
March 30, 2024 - By experimenting with options like Antialiasing, Radeon Boost, and Radeon Enhanced Sync, you can expect reduced input lag, consistent framerates, and tear-free visuals on your games. This translates to overall smoother gameplay and better quality in graphically demanding titles. In this article, we will go through some of the important AMD Adrenalin settings that you need to configure to improve your gameplay experience.
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YouTube
youtube.com › watch
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for MAX FPS & Low Latency in 2026🔧 - YouTube
▶ Optimize your PC with Hone.gg - https://hone.gg/a/barefox🚀 Want to unlock maximum FPS and lowest input lag using AMD Adrenalin Software in 2026? This comp...
Published   February 17, 2026
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Overclockers UK
forums.overclockers.co.uk › hardware › graphics cards
AMD Adrenaline driver settings... help with conflicting info please! | Overclockers UK Forums
January 14, 2025 - Limit in game FPS. Recommends to set Idle and Peak to a close value. Peak should be slightly less than half the max supported refresh rate. (So in my case 165, then halved, is 82.5 and slightly less is 80. Idle is set to 75 as a close value.) 5. Wait for Vertical Refresh.
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eXputer
exputer.com › home › best amd settings [high fps & performance]
Best AMD Settings [High FPS & Performance] - eXputer.com
July 2, 2024 - To optimize AMD global settings, enable Radeon Anti-Lag, disable AMD Radeon Chill along with Radeon Boost, and turn on Radeon Enhanced Sync. Put Wait for Vertical Refresh to always off, disable Frame Rate Target Control, use application settings ...
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Tom's Hardware Forum
forums.tomshardware.com › home › graphics cards
Question - Can someone plz provide me best settings in amd adrenalin software for best gaming performance without losing graphics quality much ? | Tom's Hardware Forum
November 29, 2023 - The only way for you to find the balance is for *you* to test individual games against your perceptions of FPS and quality. ... I would say also that part of the issue is you paired a 7800xt with the 4790k. Not sure if you are overclocking the 4790k, but seems like the 4790k would hold back the 7800xt at least a bit. ... Update your post to include full system hardware specs and OS information. What games do you play? What are the current configuration settings?
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Tier1Settings
tier1settings.com › home › guides › best amd adrenalin settings for gaming and low latency
Best AMD Adrenalin Settings for Gaming and Low Latency - Tier1Settings
May 18, 2026 - Combine with Enable Hardware-A... best AMD Adrenalin settings enable Anti-Lag, leave Chill and Boost off for competitive play, and pair FreeSync with a frame cap for tear-free low latency....
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/amdhelp › best settings on amd adrenaline!
r/AMDHelp on Reddit: Best settings on AMD Adrenaline!
January 13, 2026 -

Hi guys , i have a very good desktop , but Im new in AMD , can you guys tell me the Best settings possible for Quality on AMD Adrenaline 25.12.1 , im used to NVIDIA , só i dont very well the best settings , and some of them i dont even know what they do , the good and the bad , or in wich case i should use them , if there anyone out there who could tell me all 1 by 1 would BE awesome

I Saw some videos but they all focus mostly on performance, of course i want performance but Quality is my main objective , and also understanding for what games should use what