
This screen shows your FPS and other details. For example, in Minecraft, you can tap F3 to open the debug screen.
Keyboard Shortcut. Some games may have this option hidden away behind a keyboard shortcut. This option may be hidden behind an “Advanced” submenu. Video or Graphics Options. There may be a “Show FPS” option on the game’s video or graphics settings screen. Depending on the game, you may be able to enable FPS in a variety of ways: You could also try exploring the game’s options yourself. It might be easiest to just perform a web search for the name of the game and “show FPS” to find out if a game has a built-in FPS option and how to enable it. Many games have built-in FPS counters you can enable. Depending on the game you’re playing, this option may sometimes be hard to find. NVIDIA sees this as a way to optimize games and make them look better without having you tweak and test a game’s graphics options the old-fashioned way. RELATED: How to View and Improve Your Game's Frames Per Second (FPS) If you use GeForce Experience, you can also use NVIDIA’s game profiles to automatically choose the NVIDIA-recommended settings for different games to run best on your graphics card. In the “Overlays” window, select the “FPS Counter” tab and then click one of the four quadrants to pick where you want your FPS counter. It always appears on top of the game itself, but it’s fairly small and unobtrusive.
Look at the corner of the screen you chose while playing a game and you’ll see the FPS counter. RELATED: How to Display Steam's Built-in FPS Counter in PC Games In Steam (while no games are running), just head to Steam > Settings > In-Game and then pick a position for the FPS display from the “In-game FPS counter” dropdown. Valve recently added an FPS counter to Steam’s in-game overlay. RELATED: How to Monitor Your FPS in UWP Games on Windows 10 Steam’s In-Game Overlay And once you know what kind of FPS you’re getting in a games, you can get to work on improving your gaming performance. There are even tools that will let you monitor FPS in UWP games on Windows 10. The game video recorder FRAPS is also still around to help you display FPS in games if you’re not using Steam or NVIDIA. Steam now offers a built-in FPS display, as does NVIDIA via its GeForce Experience software. It’s easier than ever to display a PC game’s FPS.