fresh install of genshin was downloading at 10MB/s which is weird because my normal speed is 30+MB/s. did some google and found this archived post from 2 years ago and it fixed the problem. surprised this issue still around even after so long.
Go to your NVIDIA control panel, manage 3D settings and then go to program settings, click add and find genshin impact.exe. After that go down below the settings and change Vertical Sync to on and Triple buffering to On and then click apply. Also change the Vertical sync in-game to Open.
I switched from apple to the S22 ultra and overall I like the phone alot. But it seems to really struggle to run genshin impact. It's really slow and laggyand the graphics are terrible. I have all the in game settings turned down and ram plus is off. Is there anything I can do to make it run better?
In summary, if you want to slow down adventure rank progress in Genshin Impact you should stop doing the daily commissions, take your time with questing, not use primogems to buy additional resin and only start using fragile resin at AR 40 and up. Other than that you can pretty much do whatever you fancy while levelling up at a much more casual pace.
Since the new update through Intel ARC in september (ver 30.0.101.3111) , i face a very horrendous lag and slow-loading. First and foremost, i apologise since i lack vocab to explain my problems. Its like sometimes it stuttering and my screen flicker for less than a second during loading screen, and it loads slowly. In the game, my game can actually get stuck on a frame and no other way to exit other than forcing shut-down my laptop. I thought the problems were me being in a region of the game where it was quite recent with 'underwater' gimmick but even in the older regions, it still lags like it never before.
Slow-Cooked Bamboo Shoot SoupDescriptionZhongli's specialty. The ham is a butt end selected according to Yuehai Pavilion's gourmet standards. The fresh meat is pork belly, freshly hunted in Springvale, while the bamboo shoots are the densest you'll find in Qingce Village. It is then heated, slowly, gently, and with the utmost care and technique... Such a "particular" taste may only be shared with those who know how to appreciate it. EffectRestores 34% of Max HP to the selected character and regenerates 980 HP every 5s for 30s.Type Recovery DishesQualityBase Dish Bamboo Shoot SoupCharacter ZhongliEffects
With its beautiful world and anime-inspired characters, Genshin Impact has become a huge hit. The action RPG recently released for mobile, PlayStation 4, and PC. However, some PC users of Genshin Impact have reported incredibly slow download speeds. There may be a good reason for this, but there's thankfully an easy way to fix it.
Officially, developer miHoYo hasn't said why download speeds are so much slower on PC. However, the general assumption is that it's because of the massive number of people trying to download the game. Since Genshin Impact launched, it's become the biggest worldwide launch in history for a Chinese game. Because so many people are trying to play the game, the servers may have been overloaded, causing slow download speeds for its PC users.
The reasoning behind this seems pretty sound, especially considering 17 million people downloaded the free-to-play RPG on mobile alone. Perhaps the traffic volume really is the reason download speeds are so slow on PC. This leads to the next big question: how do people fix it? Assuming they don't want to wait 10+ hours on a download, as some players have reported, then there's actually a pretty easy way to speed up Genshin Impact's PC download.
Surprisingly (or maybe not), the easiest fix is closing Genshin Impact's launcher completely and then restarting it. However, this doesn't instantly guarantee a faster download speed on PC. In fact, some users have reported having to close and restart the launcher a dozen or more times before the download speed picks up. The effects may even take a while to become noticeable, as some users said it took a minute or two before their download speeds jumped from 0.5 MB per second or less to closer to 2 MB per second. Granted, that's still pretty slow - but it's noticeably faster.
The game also supports crossplay and even cross-saves between PC and mobile, so if the PC download is taking too long, people can always boot up Genshin Impact on their phones while they wait. Other users have reported simply pausing the launcher to stop the slow download speed, but that hasn't proven to work as well as just closing out the launcher completely and restarting it.
It's been a week since Genshin Impact released, and people on PC are still reporting slow download speeds. This seems to indicate it isn't a glitch, as some people have speculated, since miHoYo has implemented several updates to the game in the past several days which seemingly would've fixed the issue. More than likely, it's just because so many people are trying to download the game at the same time. Thankfully, closing and restarting the launcher is a pretty easy fix.
Do you want to play Genshin Impact? You may encounter the Genshin Impact slow download issue when installing or updating Genshin Impact. This post from MiniTool Partition Wizard shows you how to solve this problem.
When will the Genshin Impact slow download issue happen? This issue will occur after you run the game launcher. You may get this issue when you install the game (click Get Game) or update the game (click Update).
Many players are very excited about Genshin Impact, and for good reason. Despite its free to play nature, it seems to offer a lot of what gamers love right now, including an open world environment to explore and a voice acted story. Unfortunately, many are unable to experience all of those wonderful things due to an abysmally slow download speeds.
I did not spot any of this on my first playthrough, in part because my wife was driving and I was sat too far back from the screen, but mainly because we were entirely hooked on the game at this point, hooked on the sad mystery of the Finches, and we were taking the whole thing at speed. My second playthrough, though, has been a very different affair. The game holds up, but is transformed. It is transformed by the fact that I am looking to the edges rather than being drawn to the center of the narrative, certainly, but it is also transformed because I have slowed down.
Man, it is brilliant to slow down in a game. And only a certain kind of game can take it. Some games are built for speed, for velocity and sparks and the rattle of concrete seams beneath your tyres. This is fine and I love it, but I also love the game that allows you to dawdle, that not only wants you to look back over your shoulder in a way that you're not expected to, but which has put something there for you to see when you do.
It is a certain kind of relationship you strike up with a designer when you take things slow. It is almost like you are being drawn into their confidence, like you are being offered cheat codes. "Here is how we filled all those book cases," says the team behind Edith Finch when you slow down. "Here's how I made this short tower look like a tall tower," says Brendon Chung on the director's commentary for Thirty Flights of Loving, a hectic headlong pelt of a game if ever there was - but also one that, amazingly, you can pause in, mid-stream, and see all the beautiful detailing, from the double-pace planes flocking by the airport windows, to that destination, WEST EGG, popping up on the departures board. (He made the short tower look tall, BTW, by placing regular lights on the walls, and then sneakily narrowing the gaps between these lights the further up he went. Your misperceptions did the rest)
It strikes me that these two examples are from the genre we often call walking simulators. And why shouldn't they be rich with detail, why shouldn't they be built for an ambulatory pace, for a player who has brought a camera along? The thing of it is, though, if you're truly committed to slowing down, a surprising number of games can be walking simulators. There are so many things to spot and enjoy in Burnout Paradise, for example, a racing game that also lets you coast to a full-stop, and will do cool things to you if you do, in fact. There are so many things to enjoy in Grow Up, once the campaign is done and you've got all the crystals. This one isn't even about going slowly, since those crystals give you infinite jetpack fuel. Instead, it's about going aimlessly, about zoning out and letting that jetpack fuel rocket you, in beautiful white bursts, out across a landscape in which each place you visit offers a wonderful alluring hint of another place, and so you move on and on, joining the dots and accruing sweet details - details that feel like they have been left for you and you alone. There is a special halo around a game that allows you to coast through the shimmering blue facade of a waterfall and touch down on the cool earth of the cave that lies behind it.
Maybe we are more into slowing down at the moment. A colleague of mine a few months back nudged me and showed me the video he had been watching for some time - a freighter of some kind, hauling shipping crates between glowing points in the South China Sea. On my way to work today I finished S-Town, the latest podcast sensation. It tells the roundabout story of a man living in a small town in Alabama. It is a slow burn, lots of digressions, lots of details that have made themselves visible only through the time and the deliberation taken in the telling of the story.
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