

In each game, find the graphics performance options and screen resolution setting and lower them until the game performs well. This is probably the most important way to make games perform better. Intel offers no such tool, so you’ll have to adjust game settings by hand. NVIDIA and AMD offer one-click graphics settings optimization tools you can use to quickly adjust a game’s graphics settings to fit your hardware. RELATED: How to Set Your PC Games' Graphics Settings with No Effort You may or may not be able to change this. Note that not every computer has this option in its BIOS–many don’t. It may be buried under “Advanced,” “Chipset Configuration,” or another such menu. In the BIOS or UEFI settings screen, locate the integrated graphics options and look for an option that controls the amount of memory allocated to the integrated graphics hardware. Just click the question mark icon to the right of a setting to see a description of what a setting does if you need more information.

It’s possible that some graphics hardware could have different options here, or that future drivers could change the options. You can select “Custom Settings” if you’d rather tweak those settings yourself.

This particular option is a good halfway point between disabling anti-aliasing entirely and using the slower MSAA approach. That way, if a game requests MSAA anti-aliasing, the Intel graphics driver will use a better-performing alternative instead. If you choose “Use Application Settings” for Set Multi-Sample Anti-Aliasing, despite our recommendation, set Conservative Morphological Anti-Aliasing to Override.
