Best Wuthering Waves settings for the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) (2026)
On a AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) (paired with a balanced AMD Ryzen 3 3300X-class CPU), Wuthering Waves runs at roughly 62 FPS at 1080p with our optimized settings — up from about 38FPS with everything maxed. Here's the configuration and what each setting costs.
| Resolution | All-High FPS | Optimized FPS |
|---|
| 1080p | 38 | 62 |
| 1440p | 23 | 62 |
| 4K | 11 | 34 |
🚀 Biggest free win: enable FSR (Balanced) — about +55% FPS for a small sharpness trade.
Recommended settings
Upscaling — FSRBalanced+55% FPS
Renders the game at a lower internal resolution, then AI-reconstructs it to your screen size. The closest thing to "free FPS" — often +30-70% for a small sharpness loss. Almost always the first thing to enable.
Ray Tracing / Path TracingOffsaves FPS
Physically accurate lighting, reflections and shadows. Gorgeous, but by far the heaviest setting in modern games — it also adds CPU load. Turn it OFF first when chasing frames; turn it on only with plenty of headroom (and ideally upscaling enabled).
Volumetric Lighting / FogMedium+6% FPS
God-rays, light shafts and thick atmospheric fog. Expensive for the visual payoff — dropping a notch is an easy win that few people notice mid-gameplay.
Texture QualityUltra-1% FPS
Surface detail sharpness. Costs almost no FPS as long as it fits in your GPU’s VRAM — but overflow your VRAM and you get severe stutter. We push this as high as your card’s memory safely allows.
Shadow QualityHighbaseline
Controls shadow resolution and how far shadows render. One of the best FPS-for-looks trades: Ultra→High or Medium is often invisible in motion but frees real performance.
Reflections (SSR)Highbaseline
Screen-space reflections on water, glass and shiny floors. Moderately heavy and often subtle in fast games.
View / Draw DistanceHighbaseline
How far detailed objects render before fading in. Heavy in open-world games and partly CPU-bound. Lowering causes visible "pop-in," so we cut this only when needed.
Anti-AliasingHighbaseline
Smooths jagged edges. Older MSAA modes are very expensive; modern TAA is cheap. Switching a heavy AA mode to TAA reclaims a lot with little visible cost.
Ambient OcclusionHighbaseline
Soft contact shadows where objects meet. Adds depth but is moderately costly; Medium is usually plenty.
Effects / ParticlesHighbaseline
Explosions, smoke, sparks. Cheap most of the time, but can tank FPS in chaotic moments — lowering smooths out the worst dips.
Post-Processing (Motion Blur, etc.)Highbaseline
Bloom, depth of field, motion blur, film grain. Cheap on FPS and mostly personal taste — many players disable motion blur for a clearer competitive image.
Anisotropic Filtering16xbaseline
Keeps textures sharp at oblique angles (floors, roads stretching away). Essentially free on any modern GPU — leave it maxed at 16x.
⚡ Fine-tune this for your exact CPU & target FPS →
Wuthering Waves on other GPUs
Other games on the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU)
Frequently asked
What FPS does the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) get in Wuthering Waves?
With FrameCoach's optimized balanced settings, the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) averages around 62 FPS at 1080p in Wuthering Waves — up from about 38 FPS with everything on High.
Can the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) run Wuthering Waves at 1440p?
At 1440p with optimized settings, the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU) averages roughly 62 FPS in Wuthering Waves — a smooth experience.
What are the best Wuthering Waves settings for the AMD Radeon 780M (iGPU)?
Turn on FSR (Balanced), keep ray tracing off for maximum FPS, and ease the heaviest options like Volumetric Lighting / Fog and Shadow Quality down a notch. The full per-setting breakdown is above.
FPS figures are estimates from a generalized model (hardware tier × game load × per-setting weights), not live benchmarks — real performance varies by scene, drivers and game version.