Excessively fast movement in FPS games.

Some game spirit is haunting your games... a spirit of a gamer who might had a premature death while gaming.
Try this with some yesteryears expired yet functional gpu on which todays will crawl and even if the games hit full fps then congrats you had hit some jackpot! An ultimate gaming machine requiring no hardware upgrades at all. Throw in any games and they rock.
 
Yes, I've already tried using my PC off grid via electricity generator, grounded and ungrounded, and I have notied, that without the grounding even bots in Kovaaks are much blurry.
Therefore, after this, I bought and hammered in a total of 9 meters of grounding copper rod. And now, without the ground, when I disconnect it, I can see how bad it was before, but again, it's about a 5-7% improvement from the ground. The wire with which I connected the grounding pin and the computer is 12 meters long, with a cross-section of 2 mm2.
I live in a private house, and there was no grounding when we built it, so I only grounded one outlet in the house.
I also tried turning off the power in the entire house, except for the room where the computer is; this gave a very small percentage of improvement, around 3-5%. I also tried to collect various devices that could help, but they did not give the desired result. I also assembled the LC filter, but it also did not give the desired result.
The main problem is that I currently live in Ukraine, and I don’t have the opportunity to move now, but the computer and other devices work differently in different places. This is true.
I also brought home an oscilloscope to see what kind of sine wave was in the outlet, and there were no problems with it.
Bro are you for real? You did all this to fix the fast movement in the game?
Have you tried turning your pc on and off?
It no work
Guys he already tried using his PC off grid via electricity generator, grounded and ungrounded, and he has notied, that without the grounding even bots in Kovaaks are much blurry.
 
You did? You created a new OS of yours from scratch?

Have you considered the possibility that sth could be off with your monitor or your hand eye coordination?
Yes, I was thinking about that, but I have asked my family and IRL friends to watch me play, and after I showed them the gameplay of other players to see the difference, 100% of them said that it's two different games that we are playing, and in my case the characters are flying instead of moving, while other players, including professional ones, are having slow-peeking characters without any high speed, which is super suspicious. And then I told them to track simple objects on the screen, and none of them could. They have confirmed that it's impossible for humans to react at that unrealistic speed and blurriness while the objects are moving. Also, I bought a brand new monitor with a higher refresh rate, and that didn't fix the problem either. I did modify the Windows by adding and changing a huge number of aspects, but I did not create a fully new version of Windows.
 
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Bro are you for real? You did all this to fix the fast movement in the game?


Guys he already tried using his PC off grid via electricity generator, grounded and ungrounded, and he has notied, that without the grounding even bots in Kovaaks are much blurry.
Yes, I'm not joking, I'm trying to fix it, because playing on pro level requires some work to be done.
 
If you're this committed to the bit, then I suggest eliminating variables one by one. Pack up your PC and try it at a friend's house. Or at a hotel. Try to eliminate the possibility of this being related to your house's wiring. Also, at this point, you've been 'optimizing' your OS internals so much that I wouldn't be surprised if you've unknowingly messed it up and that has been what is causing your problems. Optimization upon layers of optimization leads to a very fragile system.

So try a fresh install of Windows 10. Or switch to Linux, and see if the issue persists. On Linux, every driver in the whole stack from your networking to graphics, will be different. You could also try an AMD GPU.

Parallelly, try and go to a gaming cafe, or to multiple friend's houses -- play a few hours and see if any of them don't have these issues. If I were you, I would be obsessed with finding the PC that doesn't have any of these problems. So you can try to replicate that magic sauce to your setup.

If all of that fails, consider the possibility that this is all in your head.
 
If you're this committed to the bit, then I suggest eliminating variables one by one. Pack up your PC and try it at a friend's house. Or at a hotel. Try to eliminate the possibility of this being related to your house's wiring. Also, at this point, you've been 'optimizing' your OS internals so much that I wouldn't be surprised if you've unknowingly messed it up and that has been what is causing your problems. Optimization upon layers of optimization leads to a very fragile system.

So try a fresh install of Windows 10. Or switch to Linux, and see if the issue persists. On Linux, every driver in the whole stack from your networking to graphics, will be different. You could also try an AMD GPU.

Parallelly, try and go to a gaming cafe, or to multiple friend's houses -- play a few hours and see if any of them don't have these issues. If I were you, I would be obsessed with finding the PC that doesn't have any of these problems. So you can try to replicate that magic sauce to your setup.

If all of that fails, consider the possibility that this is all in your head.
I have already tried fresh Windows, and it's the worst experience ever. Every reboot is a new game. Linux doesn't support most of the games and Valorant one of them. The problem remains in friends's houses, but it's different; it's either worse or better, but at the end of the day, it looks similar. I had an AMD GPU, and I have sold it. I wouldn't recommend anyone buy those. When it comes to what I have done to the system, I have turned off most of the stuff and brought it back, but the issue is still there, so it's not any kind of tweak, bios, or powersavings.

The problem itself can't be in my head because members of my family and friends are seeing exactly the same issue, and the entire community with the same problem can see that as well. I have recorded the video; there is no room to react; even the number of frames while characters are falling differs a lot, as does the amount of blood on the characters and the speed they are moving.
 
I have already tried fresh Windows, and it's the worst experience ever. Every reboot is a new game. Linux doesn't support most of the games and Valorant one of them. The problem remains in friends's houses, but it's different; it's either worse or better, but at the end of the day, it looks similar. I had an AMD GPU, and I have sold it. I wouldn't recommend anyone buy those. When it comes to what I have done to the system, I have turned off most of the stuff and brought it back, but the issue is still there, so it's not any kind of tweak, bios, or powersavings.

The problem itself can't be in my head because members of my family and friends are seeing exactly the same issue, and the entire community with the same problem can see that as well. I have recorded the video; there is no room to react; even the number of frames while characters are falling differs a lot, as does the amount of blood on the characters and the speed they are moving.
CS:GO/CS2 runs on Linux. So does Apex Legends. And many others.

You say you can't find a PC that doesn't have this problem. But you also say the pros don't seem to have it. That is a problem. Because the pros are much better at the game than most people. And usually higher skill makes things look a lot easier. It's a confounding variable. You would need to play on one of their computers and/or watch them play irl.

If you're right, this is a problem that persists across multiple hardware platforms and game engines. It's not impossible, but seems unlikely. Then there's Ukranian power grid, with the ongoing war, that may not be in the best shape. An oscilloscope doesn't necessarily disprove that. And I'm not sure about the quality of the power output from the generator you used either. But a very simple way to get rid of that variable is just to use a reasonably powerful gaming laptop, with the mains disconnected. Then you're on dc power and none of this should apply.

Also, make a better video on this. Compile clips of streamers/pros vs your experiences. Count the frames. Make it indisputable. Something that will go viral. Then people will take you seriously.
 
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Please don't feed the trolls.

The videos OP has posted looked like people using aimbots, and maybe wallhacks. But anyway, I'm pretty convinced this is a troll and I'm not willing to spend time troubleshooting this non existent problem.

If it's not a troll, please post links of the extensive troubleshooting that the "community" you mentioned does, please post links of the "top players" posting about this issue somewhere or trying to troubleshoot it.
 
Please don't feed the trolls.

The videos OP has posted looked like people using aimbots, and maybe wallhacks. But anyway, I'm pretty convinced this is a troll and I'm not willing to spend time troubleshooting this non existent problem.

If it's not a troll, please post links of the extensive troubleshooting that the "community" you mentioned does, please post links of the "top players" posting about this issue somewhere or trying to troubleshoot it.
Most of the players who are experiencing this issue don't understand it and got benched or, even worse, kicked from their roster. The most outstanding example is Simple from CounterStrike; he's dying behind walls, getting ferrari peeked by people who are barely holding their mouse and playing 10 times better than him, meanwhile having quite bad statistics overall, which is nonsense since even such a decent player can't see the difference, and it's happening not once or twice; it's a pretty long period of time. Moreover, have you ever heard of the LAG community?

CS:GO/CS2 runs on Linux. So does Apex Legends. And many others.

You say you can't find a PC that doesn't have this problem. But you also say the pros don't seem to have it. That is a problem. Because the pros are much better at the game than most people. And usually higher skill makes things look a lot easier. It's a confounding variable. You would need to play on one of their computers and/or watch them play irl.

If you're right, this is a problem that persists across multiple hardware platforms and game engines. It's not impossible, but seems unlikely. Then there's Ukranian power grid, with the ongoing war, that may not be in the best shape. An oscilloscope doesn't necessarily disprove that. And I'm not sure about the quality of the power output from the generator you used either. But a very simple way to get rid of that variable is just to use a reasonably powerful gaming laptop, with the mains disconnected. Then you're on dc power and none of this should apply.

Also, make a better video on this. Compile clips of streamers/pros vs your experiences. Count the frames. Make it indisputable. Something that will go viral. Then people will take you seriously.
There is a guy on YouTube who has been making videos on this topic for a while. It's in Russian, but you can use auto-generated subtitles, but that's not needed because you can just notice the difference between gameplay. And most of those players are the best of the best with international wins, and still they are struggling a lot, depending on time of day and locations where they are playing.
Examples:
1)Fortnite Battle Royale
2)CS2
3)PUBG
4)Valorant

5)Valorant + CS
6)Valorant2
The person made a wrong conclusion that it is netcode of the game, as this problem in all games. Not every player is peeking like this.

7) Valorant 3

8) Example You can see the difference in this video; if you don't get it, try 0.25 speed. Same person, same PC, same settings and OS, but the difference is day and night. Even the feeling of the game in terms of smoothness changes during the day, and at night the game usually feels much better for me as well.
 
Please don't feed the trolls.

The videos OP has posted looked like people using aimbots, and maybe wallhacks. But anyway, I'm pretty convinced this is a troll and I'm not willing to spend time troubleshooting this non existent problem.

If it's not a troll, please post links of the extensive troubleshooting that the "community" you mentioned does, please post links of the "top players" posting about this issue somewhere or trying to troubleshoot it.
I think there is an AI bot behind this ID, not an actual human. It hasn't reacted negatively to any member here despite them making fun of it. Your post ought to insult the OP but it is just as unaffected in response. Look at this one line it writes in reply to you.
The most outstanding example is Simple from CounterStrike; he's dying behind walls, getting ferrari peeked by people who are barely holding their mouse and playing 10 times better than him, meanwhile having quite bad statistics overall, which is nonsense since even such a decent player can't see the difference, and it's happening not once or twice; it's a pretty long period of time.
Yeah, that's one line. Doesn't appear to be a human by any stretch.
 
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Jeez, OP is definitely a human. Does not talk like an AI at all. And if he's trolling, it is not getting many laughs or keks. He's just a guy who wants to stop lagging or at least perceives lag everywhere. There are far weirder people out there on the internet, lol.
 
I also brought home an oscilloscope to see what kind of sine wave was in the outlet, and there were no problems with it.
On oscilloscope you don't wanna see just the sine wave but the FFT of the wave, to see the harmonics peak. This will give you more detail on the signal, most oscilloscope use math functions to generate the FFT graph from the sinewave, but spectrum analyzer gives you the most detail.
 
the most outstanding example is Simple from CounterStrike
Find this a bit funny as he's benched by Navi now. He's lost that fire in him to play. Kept shouting at the new game like an old man while kids like monesy complained, adapted after fixes and just went and won a tournament.

I'll give my last reply as I just feel bad at this point. I do not think that you're making your bread and butter from playing valorant or cs2. If you are then I'll rightfully shut my mouth. If not, then I think you should just take a step back and see if this much effort is needed for one of the most cancerous games you could ever play.

Videos that you've mentioned are what happens when you play a game online, that is unavoidable. There's a reason why tournaments are LAN only, to avoid said ferrari peeks. It's hilarious how someone in one of the videos said that CSGO's netcode is superior to valorant. That's like comparing catshit to dogshit. Remember shots 1-5?

As long as you play online, this is unavoidable. No matter what internet you use, gigabit fiber,starlink, your results are not going to change.

8) Example You can see the difference in this video; if you don't get it, try 0.25 speed. Same person, same PC, same settings and OS, but the difference is day and night. Even the feeling of the game in terms of smoothness changes during the day, and at night the game usually feels much better for me as well.
The testing methodology just isn't right. If you are going to test it, and you're willing to sacrifice your time and money, do it how 3kliksphillip did. I know you mentioned valorant but you're better off not playing that shit.

I wish you good luck, please do not burn down your house by messing with it's electrical connections
 
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I think there is an AI bot behind this ID, not an actual human. It hasn't reacted negatively to any member here despite them making fun of it.

1) I've ran the posts through an AI checker, and there's a 0% AI content.
2) The guy is Ukrainian, and possibly using Google Translate for the posts

3) (and this is to all of the members who are in this thread) Making fun of someone looking for help is not really a nice thing to do.
 
I think there is an AI bot behind this ID, not an actual human. It hasn't reacted negatively to any member here despite them making fun of it. Your post ought to insult the OP but it is just as unaffected in response. Look at this one line it writes in reply to you.

Yeah, that's one line. Doesn't appear to be a human by any stretch.
The only reason why I'm not responding to some posts is due to the fact that it's pointless to talk to people who are not willing to help.
1) I've ran the posts through an AI checker, and there's a 0% AI content.
2) The guy is Ukrainian, and possibly using Google Translate for the posts

3) (and this is to all of the members who are in this thread) Making fun of someone looking for help is not really a nice thing to do.
I'm not using Google Translate unless I don't know how to spell the word or the translation of some terminology because English isn't my first language. Also, this is not the first forum where I'm trying to find answers, and I made a mistake by using my main email and real nickname, which resulted in people stalking me, texting weird stuff, and even threatening.
I'm here to find the answers. That's it. I don't want to trash talk because it will result in pointless Internet conflicts, which are a waste of time.

On oscilloscope you don't wanna see just the sine wave but the FFT of the wave, to see the harmonics peak. This will give you more detail on the signal, most oscilloscope use math functions to generate the FFT graph from the sinewave, but spectrum analyzer gives you the most detail.
What is the best spectrum analyzer to look for in terms of revealing the full map of what's going on?
Find this a bit funny as he's benched by Navi now. He's lost that fire in him to play. Kept shouting at the new game like an old man while kids like monesy complained, adapted after fixes and just went and won a tournament.

I'll give my last reply as I just feel bad at this point. I do not think that you're making your bread and butter from playing valorant or cs2. If you are then I'll rightfully shut my mouth. If not, then I think you should just take a step back and see if this much effort is needed for one of the most cancerous games you could ever play.

Videos that you've mentioned are what happens when you play a game online, that is unavoidable. There's a reason why tournaments are LAN only, to avoid said ferrari peeks. It's hilarious how someone in one of the videos said that CSGO's netcode is superior to valorant. That's like comparing catshit to dogshit. Remember shots 1-5?

As long as you play online, this is unavoidable. No matter what internet you use, gigabit fiber,starlink, your results are not going to change.


The testing methodology just isn't right. If you are going to test it, and you're willing to sacrifice your time and money, do it how 3kliksphillip did. I know you mentioned valorant but you're better off not playing that shit.

I wish you good luck, please do not burn down your house by messing with it's electrical connections
Unfortunately, yes, my life depends on whether I can play or not, because it used to be the only income that I had. Right now I had to change the discipline to Valorant from another game, which was much better in many factors, but the number of players and the competitive part of the game died and most of the organizations left that game, which resulted in my leaving that particular discipline and changing it not for the best game ever, but at least it's not dead since I have a strong willingness to compete. In Valorant there are a bunch of tournaments, teams, franchise organizations, and so on. I'm a competitive player, not a pointless, time-wasting gamer. I have only 2 games installed on my PC, which are Aim Trainer and Valorant. That's it.

I have found so many players who are having almost no problems or almost none in terms of fast-moving characters. And most of them are from Turkey, Spain, Denmark, and the Netherlands, and most of them are either successful streamers who are playing super decent due to their conditions or Tier 2 players, which is obvious because the game feels super easy for them; they are not dropping a sweat while playing the game since most of their shoots are getting registered and the players are not ferrari peeking. And when I asked them about aim training or anything like that, they did not have a schedule or any warm-up for the most part; they didn't need to get used to the random feeling of the mouse each time they booted up a PC; they had everything consistent. That makes sense to me, because when I had that feeling, the game felt amazingly responsive, and I only needed 1 DM, not 20 like now, to start a practice.
These guys can do 360 in front of the top 10 players before they shoot because they have not 50 ms to react but around 500-800 ms. This guy has such conditions, for example. You can check his clips, when enemies don't even have time to react, and not because of his unexpected moves.
 
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As a sanity check, are you overclocking anything? CPU, RAM, GPU etc? I would go below stock. Try removing the XMP profiles on the RAM, lowering the PL1/PL2 limits below stock on the i9-9900k and applying a conservative undervolt on the GPU. Test at every change.

Edit: Make sure the PC is stable with Prime95 small FFTs, Y-cruncher, several hours of runs of CBR23. Any memory/cpu error sensitive test you can throw at it.
 
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Some games are just riddled with hackers, check The Finals for e.g., and some games just have bad netcode, I played Xdefiant for a couple of days and uninstalled it after I got killed around corners at least 200 times.
 
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As a sanity check, are you overclocking anything? CPU, RAM, GPU etc? I would go below stock. Try removing the XMP profiles on the RAM, lowering the PL1/PL2 limits below stock on the i9-9900k and applying a conservative undervolt on the GPU. Test at every change.
I have done all of that; RAM is stable; XMP doesn't guarantee stability; I have tested it for 10+ hours in TM5 and the profile of the Anta777 Extreme, Karhu, with and without FPU; I have done those tests for more than 9 months straight, so there is definitely not an issue with RAM. The same goes for CPU and GPU; the CPU survived an entire day of Prime95 with a max temperature of 82 °C.

I have tried to go below the stock, and the lower the frequency I set, the more blurriness appeared on moving targets. Thus, that's the opposite of what I'm trying to fix. My system is working super stable in terms of OC and OS, because I have mentioned the amount of things that I did and tested. For example, I did more than 789 tests to find the perfect spot for my GPU. Around 1214+ tests of the RAM. I'm not kidding; I have uploaded most of them to my friend, and he called me a psycho for that.
 
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