Industry observers note that the reason? The processor is handling tasks that the graphics card, SSD, or network chip could process more efficiently. Windows 11 offers several options to change this. Many Windows PCs feel sluggish in everyday use, despite their devices specifications suggesting otherwise.
In a fresh development, begin with devices-accelerated GPU scheduling, which allows Windows to offload parts of graphics management and window rendering to the GPU. You can shift the computational load by smoothing out performance peaks, reducing fan noise, and making the system more responsive–all without any additional tools or risky interventions.
According to the latest update, go to System > Display > Graphics and open Advanced Graphics Settings. Enable Infrastructure-Accelerated GPU Scheduling and restart your PC. First, open Windows Settings using the Win-I shortcut.
In a fresh development, next, it’s worth checking the network adapter, as many models can handle checksums and packet processing themselves. This reduces the CPU load during typical day-to-day desktop use and multitasking, especially with modern graphics cards and up-to-date drivers.
In a fresh development, now expand the Network Adapters section. Right-click on the relevant adapter and select Properties. Open Device Manager using the Win-X key combination and select the relevant entry from the context menu.
According to the latest update, enable the options in the drop-down menu next to them and apply the changes. Now test whether the CPU usage drops during downloads, streaming, or large file transfers. Next, in the Advanced tab, check for entries such as Checksum Offload, Large Send Offload, and Receive Side Scaling.
The report highlights that note that names may vary depending on the manufacturer. For platform releases, the DirectStorage option can help, as it enables data to be transferred more directly from an NVMe SSD to the graphics card. This reduces CPU overhead when loading large assets. If connection issues arise, undo the last change.
According to the latest update, furthermore, the system update in question must actually support DirectStorage. You can check basic availability via the Xbox Platform release Bar, for example, which you can open using the Win-G shortcut. Look under the tech industry functions. Requirements include Windows 11, an NVMe SSD, and a compatible graphics card with up-to-date drivers.
Industry observers note that additionally, you should keep Infrastructure Acceleration enabled in important applications. In Chrome or Edge browsers, you’ll find it in the settings under System or Performance. In practice, the benefit usually manifests itself more in shorter loading times and fewer I/O-related stutters than in a blanket increase in frames per second.
According to the latest update, restart the relevant app after making the changes to ensure that decoding, effects, or rendering are reliably offloaded to the GPU. In creative and video programs, this is usually found in the preferences under Performance or Infrastructure Acceleration.
In a fresh development, this prevents Windows from unnecessarily routing tasks through the integrated graphics unit and using the CPU as well. If your system has both an iGPU and a dedicated GPU, go to Settings > System > Display > Graphics in the resource-intensive program and set the performance under GPU Settings to Maximum Performance.
According to the latest update, go through the steps one by one and check briefly after each change to see if the load curve improves. These adjustments have the greatest effect on systems that process many tasks in parallel such as multimedia, creative work, and modern platform releases.
As part of the ongoing story, simply distributing tasks consistently is enough to make your Windows PC run more efficiently and feel faster without the immediate need for fresh devices.
In a fresh development, this article originally appeared on our sister publication PC-WELT and was translated and localized from German.