Windows 10/11 variable refresh rate enabled or disabled

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Windows 10/11 variable refresh rate enabled or disabled
Windows 10/11 variable refresh rate enabled or disabled
Windows 10/11 variable refresh rate enabled or disabled

A variable refresh rate (VRR) is the general term for a dynamic display refresh rate that can vary continuously and transparently on the fly, on displays that support variable refresh rate technologies. A display that supports a variable refresh rate typically supports a specific range of refresh rates (e.g. 30 Hertz to 144 Hertz). This is called variable refresh rate range (VRR range). The refresh rate can vary continuously and transparently anywhere within this range, even as a fraction.

Issues covered in this tutorial:
Windows 10 with variable refresh rate
Windows 11 with variable refresh rate
ASUS variable refresh rate
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Variable refresh rate PC
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The main goal of any graphics card is to provide a smooth and smooth gaming experience. To do this, a graphics card sends images to your PC screen as quickly as possible. However, most device monitors refresh their image at a set frequency. So, when the graphics card delivers images outside of the defined schedule, the display screen simultaneously displays part of one image and the next image. This makes the image look distorted when it splits in two (screen tearing). This phenomenon only gets worse as the game's dynamic frame rate increases.

This tutorial will apply to computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running Windows 10 and Windows 11 (Home, Pro, Enterprise, Education) operating systems from all supported hardware manufacturers, such as Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Huawei and Samsung.

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