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Optimization guide · Updated on May 20, 2026

How to improve FPS in Fortnite (PC)

Fortnite (Chapter 5) runs on Unreal Engine 5 and offers two radically different rendering modes: DirectX 12 with Nanite and Lumen for visual quality, and Performance Mode (DX11) for maximum frames. For competitive play at 144+ FPS, Performance Mode is practically mandatory. This guide covers the most impactful settings to maximize your framecount without sacrificing competitive viability.

⚠️ Known for: Massive RAM usage since the UE5 migration (16 GB real minimum) and FPS drops in late-game circles when many players and explosions are concentrated in one area.
Example with your hardware

This is what you'd gain with a NVIDIA RTX 3060

Without optimization (Ultra)
89 FPS
1080p · Ultra · no DLSS
With this guide applied
~225 FPS
1080p · Recommended settings
+ DLSS Quality
~288 FPS
1080p · Settings + DLSS

Calculations based on our FPS model combined with the % gain of each setting (measured in public benchmarks). Calculate your exact FPS with your own hardware →

1. Quick wins (no visual loss)

Start here. Each one adds a little, but together they give +89% free FPS.

Motion Blur

Recommended: Off · Visual impact: Imperceptible · Consensus: 10/10 fuentes
+4% FPS

In any competitive game, Motion Blur is the first thing to turn off. It adds visual noise in combat and contributes nothing useful. Always off.

Modo de Renderizado

Recommended: Rendimiento (DX11) · Visual impact: Medium · Consensus: 10/10 fuentes
+80% FPS

The single biggest change you can make in Fortnite. Performance Mode uses DirectX 11 instead of DX12 and disables Nanite and Lumen, giving double or triple the FPS. For competitive play, this is your first choice.

Console Parity Mode

Recommended: Off · Visual impact: Imperceptible · Consensus: 9/10 fuentes
+5% FPS

This option forces console behavior on PC. Off enables PC-specific optimizations. Always disable on PC.

Show FPS

Recommended: On · Visual impact: Imperceptible · Consensus: 8/10 fuentes
+0% FPS

No FPS impact, but lets you monitor whether your changes are working. Keep it on while optimizing.

2. Medium impact settings

Here's where most of the FPS is. Minor visual impact, major performance impact.

Calidad de Sombras

Recommended: Off (modo competitivo) · Visual impact: Medium · Consensus: 10/10 fuentes
+15% FPS

Disabling shadows in Fortnite is a competitive standard: it removes visual distractions AND frees significant GPU resources. Used by most professional players.

Ambient Occlusion

Recommended: Off · Visual impact: Low · Consensus: 9/10 fuentes
+8% FPS

Ambient Occlusion adds depth to the image but has a real GPU cost. Off gives a flatter look with better performance.

Calidad de Efectos

Recommended: Bajo · Visual impact: Low · Consensus: 9/10 fuentes
+10% FPS

Particle effects in Fortnite are very heavy — explosions, gunfire, storms. Low dramatically cuts GPU load during the most intense moments.

Post Processing

Recommended: Bajo · Visual impact: Low · Consensus: 9/10 fuentes
+6% FPS

Bloom, chromatic aberration, and other post-process effects. Low minimizes them for a cleaner image and more FPS.

Nanite Virtualized Geometry

Recommended: Off (modo competitivo) · Visual impact: Medium · Consensus: 8/10 fuentes
+12% FPS

Nanite is UE5's geometry technology. Visually spectacular but expensive. In competitive DX12 mode, disabling it gives a noticeable FPS boost.

Resolución 3D

Recommended: 100% · Visual impact: High · Consensus: 10/10 fuentes
+0% FPS

Do NOT lower 3D resolution — it loses too much clarity for long-range shots. Use Performance Mode instead to gain FPS without sacrificing render resolution.

3. Upscaling (DLSS / FSR / XeSS)

The biggest gain in the game. Compatible with almost any modern GPU.

DLSS Performance (NVIDIA RTX)

+40% FPS

For competitive Fortnite use DLSS Performance or Balanced (not Quality): you want FPS, not maximum visual quality. DLSS Performance gives +40% FPS with slight edge softening.

FSR2 Quality (AMD y NVIDIA no-RTX)

+22% FPS

FSR2 Quality works well in Fortnite. Available on all GPUs, including AMD and NVIDIA GTX cards.

DLSS Frame Generation (RTX 40-series)

+70% FPS

Only useful if you already have 60+ FPS base. Frame Generation doubles perceived FPS but adds latency — acceptable at 60+, not at 30 FPS base.

TSR (Temporal Super Resolution de Epic)

+18% FPS

Epic Games' own upscaler, available in DX12 mode. Quality mode maintains good image quality. Option if you don't have RTX or a compatible AMD card.

4. Tips by GPU

NVIDIA

  • •For competitive Fortnite, use DLSS Performance or Balanced — not Quality. In competitive play, FPS is king.
  • •Frame Generation only if you already have 60+ FPS base. It adds unacceptable latency at low framerates.
  • •In NVIDIA Control Panel, enable NVIDIA Reflex in the game settings — significantly reduces input latency.
  • •Resizable BAR (ReBAR) gives +2-5% in Fortnite, enable it in BIOS.

AMD

  • •FSR2 Quality is your best upscaling option in Fortnite — available in DX12 mode.
  • •Smart Access Memory (SAM) gives minor benefit in Fortnite (~3%), but costs nothing to enable.
  • •Anti-Lag+ available on RDNA 3 — enable it to reduce input lag in competitive play.

Sistema

  • •16 GB RAM is the real minimum for Fortnite UE5 without stuttering. With 8 GB the game loads assets during the match causing drops.
  • •240 FPS is the standard competitive target. To reach it, Performance Mode is almost mandatory.
  • •Close Discord overlay and any screen capture software during ranked games — they can cost 5-10 FPS.

5. Known game issues

Chapter 5 stuttering from Nanite

Nanite's introduction in UE5 brought micro-stutters when loading new geometry. Reduced by setting 'Nanite Virtualized Geometry' to Off in competitive settings.

Estado: Improved in Chapter 5 patches (ongoing)

Excessive RAM usage (16 GB minimum)

Since the UE5 migration, Fortnite uses 12-14 GB RAM during intense matches. With 8 GB of RAM the game forces disk paging causing severe drops.

FPS drops in final storm circles

In late-game circles with many players shooting and building, the CPU gets saturated. This is a design constraint. Closing background applications helps.

6. Frequently asked questions

How many FPS does an RTX 3060 get in Fortnite?▾
In Performance Mode (DX11) with competitive Low/Medium settings, an RTX 3060 at 1080p reaches 144-200 FPS stably. In DX12 mode at High quality expect 80-110 FPS.
Performance Mode vs DirectX 12: which should I choose?▾
For competitive: always Performance Mode — gives 2-3x the FPS of DX12 with acceptable visuals. For casual play or streaming: DX12 with Nanite and Lumen active provides a superior visual experience.
What are the standard competitive settings?▾
Performance Mode, Shadows Off, Post Processing Low, Effects Low, 3D Resolution 100%, Motion Blur Off, Console Parity Mode Off. This is the configuration used by most professional players.
Why do I need 16 GB of RAM?▾
Since Unreal Engine 5, Fortnite uses 12-14 GB of RAM during a match. With 8 GB the system swaps to disk and causes stuttering during the most intense action.

Want to know exactly how many FPS YOUR PC will get?

Enter your GPU and CPU in our calculator and measure the real impact of each setting.

Calculate FPS for Fortnite →

Calculations based on consensus of technical sources and our own FPS model. More about our methodology →

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