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PC Optimization

What is Game Mode Windows? Should You Use It?

Date Published

Game Mode is a Windows 10 and Windows 11 feature that prioritizes system resources for games.
When a game is running, Game Mode gives it higher CPU scheduling priority and reduces certain background activities that could interfere with performance.

Game Mode doesn’t increase your computer’s hardware power, but it helps ensure that other processes are less likely to interrupt your game.

This article will discuss what Game Mode actually does, who it helps and if you should leave it on or turn it off. We will also go over how Game Mode relates to Game Bar, another Windows feature often confused with Game Mode.

Quick Answers

What is Game Mode?

Game Mode is a Windows setting that prioritizes your game over other background tasks. When a game is running, Windows gives it higher CPU scheduling priority and reduces certain background activities that could interfere with performance. Game Mode can also limit interruptions such as Windows Update driver installations and system notifications while you’re playing. Game Mode doesn’t increase your computer’s hardware performance or overclock your CPU. Instead, it helps your system focus on the game by adjusting how background tasks are scheduled.

Does Game Mode actually help?

Yes, however, the impact is going to be minimal. In benchmark testing by XDA Developers (tested on an RTX 4070 Ti Super with a Ryzen 5 7600X and 32GB of RAM at 1440p), Game Mode provided a 2.7-3.3% FPS improvement across three games, with the biggest gains in frame time consistency (1% lows) rather than average FPS. On lower end computers this could make the difference between a smooth gaming experience and a poor one. For higher end computers, you probably won’t notice the difference because the computer already has enough processing power.

Should I enable or disable Game Mode?

So If you have a dual-CCD Ryzen X3D CPU such as the Ryzen 9 7950X3D, 7900X3D, 9950X3d keep Windows Game Mode enabled. On these CPUs, Game Mode is part of the system that helps Windows and AMD’s 3D V-Cache/chipset drivers recognize a game and prefer the V-Cache CCD for that game. Game Mode does not handle CCD selection by itself, but disabling it can interfere with the intended scheduling behavior on these processors. Game Mode is enabled by default in Windows 10 and Windows 11 and generally improves system behavior while gaming by prioritizing the active game and reducing certain background interruptions.

Is Game Mode the same as Game Bar?

No. Game Mode and Xbox Game Bar are separate Windows features. Game Mode is a lightweight system feature that prioritizes games and reduces certain background interruptions while you’re playing. Xbox Game Bar is an overlay (opened with Win + G) that provides tools such as screenshots, gameplay recording, widgets, and an FPS counter. While Game Mode has minimal system impact, Xbox Game Bar can use additional system resources when running or recording gameplay. If you don’t use its features, you can disable it to reduce background processes.

What Game Mode actually does

When Game Mode is enabled, Windows performs three functions:

Reduces background task priority. Windows Update, search indexing, and telemetry tasks fall to the bottom of the list behind your current game. As such, your game has first dibs on your processor and RAM.

Blocks driver installations. While you’re playing, Windows won’t install any new drivers. Game Mode suppresses Windows Update driver installs and blocks restart notifications while you’re in a game. This means no surprises with regard to restarting your PC during gameplay, and no slowdowns from driver installations happening in the background.

Adjusts processor scheduling. Your processor is able to spend more time executing code for your game and less time executing code for background processes that you don’t care about during gameplay. As a result, you see fewer random slowdowns and a smoother, more consistent frame rate.

In simpler terms, Game Mode is a straightforward, unobtrusive priority system. It doesn’t change your hardware or adjust any low-level settings, it simply informs Windows that a game is currently running and that it needs to prioritize that game.

Real-world benchmark results

In XDA Developers’ benchmark comparison, Abhinav Raj tested Windows 11 Game Mode on an NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti Super paired with an AMD Ryzen 5 7600X and 32GB of DDR5-6000 RAM. All games were tested at 1440p using MSI Afterburner with RivaTuner Statistics Server for frame capture. Here’s what they found:

Fortnite (Epic, DLSS Quality): baseline 165 FPS → Game Mode 170 FPS (+3.0% average, +3.6% in 1% lows).

The Last of Us Part II (Max, DLSS Frame Gen): baseline 150 FPS → Game Mode 155 FPS (+3.3% average, +2.8% in 1% lows).

Hogwarts Legacy (Ultra, DLSS Quality): baseline 183 FPS → Game Mode 188 FPS (+2.7% average, +2.6% in 1% lows).

The XDA review concluded that Game Mode “effectively averts sub-100 FPS hiccups” and “delivers perceptible stability for competitive and immersive play.” The gains are small in raw FPS, but the consistency improvements (1% lows) are where Game Mode makes the real difference — fewer stutters during the moments that matter most.

The Verdict

Competitive gamers. Leave Game Mode on. Turn Game Bar off. If you need to record, use ShadowPlay or OBS. This is the least amount of overhead for you — the benefits of having background priority without the overhead of the overlay.

Casual gamers. Leave both on. If you are playing single player games or casual multiplayer where perfect timing for frames isn’t important, Game Bar is a nice feature. Fast screenshots, instant replay and an FPS counter without having to download anything. The cost of 200-400MB of overhead is worth it for the added functionality, especially if you have 16GB+ of RAM in your computer.

Having trouble with Game Mode? Older games (particularly those from 2015-2018) occasionally conflict with Game Mode. If a game is stuttering or crashing only when Game Mode is on, try turning it off for that game. If not, there’s no reason to turn it off since Game Mode is free, invisible and easily reversible.