GamePP Frequently Asked Questions - Professional Hardware Monitoring Software FAQ Knowledge Base

This is a classic struggle between over-sharpening and blur. At first, I cranked the GPU filter sharpening to the max, but the image got these hideous white edges—it looked like a cheap oil painting. In environment 2026-06-E, I gradually bumped the sharpening from 0% and finally locked it between 35% - 42%, with detail enhancement at 20%. GamePP showed the GPU core clock staying steady at 2580MHz - 2610MHz, with frame times between 12ms - 15ms. It looks way cleaner now, though I noticed some slight ghosting during fast turns, likely due to the post-processing overhead. Still, it's a tiny price to pay to get rid of that original smudge. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 11:36 AM.

I fell for the trap of thinking max sharpening equals max clarity, but it just made the world look like it was scrubbed with sandpaper. Following report W4-A1-05, I opened the NVIDIA filter panel and dropped sharpening from 50% to 15%, while adding 20% detail enhancement. HWiNFO showed VRAM staying between 11.2GB - 12.1GB, so the filters weren't overloading the card. This combo cut the noise by over 40% without adding those weird white halos around edges. Unfortunately, I still see some color banding in the shadows—likely because my 8-bit panel can't handle the precision of AI-sharpened edges. Last updated onMarch 26, 2026 11:47 AM.

This is a classic case of over-sharpening causing visual pollution. I initially cranked the sharpening to the max, and the edges got these hideous white halos that looked like a cheap filter. In a Win11 environment with driver 560.1, I opened the NVIDIA Game Filter panel and dialed the sharpening down from 80% to about 35% - 40%, while dropping the contrast by 5%. The graininess vanished instantly. GamePP showed this had zero impact on performance, with frame times staying at 11ms - 13ms. One downside: in rainy scenes, the lower sharpening makes distant objects look a bit blurry. It's a limitation you just have to deal with—you've got to choose between clinical sharpness and a clean image. Last updated onMarch 28, 2026 1:25 PM.

In test case 2025-VIS-03, setting NVIDIA filters to 50% sharpening created hideous white halos and grain. I tried lowering contrast, but the image just looked washed out and muddy. I switched to a tiered approach: dropped sharpening to 25% - 30% and set in-game anti-aliasing to TAA High. GamePP showed frame times stabilized between 12 ms - 15 ms, and the grit was mostly gone. Still, I notice slight screen tearing during fast camera pans. This is likely a mismatch between the monitor's refresh rate and filter render latency. You can't fix this with sharpening alone, and the visual experience still feels slightly off. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 10:57 AM.

This is a classic case of sharpening overload. In experiment 2026-AS-15, I set the NVIDIA filter sharpening to 80%, and the edges got these weird white halos, like the screen was salted. I dialed it back slowly and found the sweet spot between 35% - 45%. To fix the color shift, I went into the NVIDIA Control Panel's Desktop Color Settings and manually adjusted the digital vibrance to 235. GamePP showed frame times fluctuating smoothly between 12ms - 16ms. While it's clearer, the grain in dark scenes is still heavier than the native quality, especially at 4K where the artificiality is obvious during high-contrast scenes. Last updated onMarch 22, 2026 1:38 PM.

Back to Top