Updating your BIOS for more FPS
Also searched as: bios update fps · update bios gaming · bios for more frames · flash bios fps · agesa fps
What it does
Flashing a motherboard BIOS update expecting a direct jump in frame rate.
The honest verdict
A BIOS update almost never changes raw FPS on its own — it is firmware for the board, not a performance switch. What it CAN do is real but indirect: on AMD especially, a newer BIOS (AGESA) can unlock better, more stable memory support, so a RAM kit that would not run its rated speed before now can — and faster, stable memory genuinely helps frames. It also fixes stability bugs and adds support for newer CPUs. So update your BIOS for stability, memory compatibility, or a CPU upgrade — good reasons — but treat any frame gain as a side effect of better memory, not the update itself. And flash carefully: a botched BIOS update is one of the few ways to actually brick a board.
How Compy treats it
Compy won't recommend it. If you're curious anyway: change one thing at a time, measure it on your own rig, and revert unless it's clearly better — that loop is exactly what Compy is built around.
The Compy Blackbook holds 174 graded entries like this one, judged against your hardware — and every change it does make is reversible, with the receipt to prove it.
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