The neglected visuals are a bit of a shame, because gameplay-wise (the factor which obviously carries most weight) PES 2015’s demo feels pretty satisfying. PES 2015’s demo ran at 60fps throughout, without the kind of “micro-stutter” which plagued FIFA’s latest PC effort. If nothing else, the low overall image quality means this game should run on almost any vaguely games-oriented PC still capable of booting up but I can also understand people not wanting to support this kind of behaviour. There’s no way you can describe the PC version of PES 2015 as a looker, and it baffles me that we aren’t worthy of the same image quality as the PS4/Xbox One versions. On the other hand, elaborate grass textures are pretty much at the absolute bottom of my “things that are most desirable in a PC football game” list. Players have a fair bit of aliasing on them, whatever lighting model is being used looks awfully flat, and the grass on the pitch looks rubbish. There isn’t much else in the way of graphics options beyond three (low/medium/high) presets.Įverything you see illustrating this article is with the graphics set to “high.” As you can probably tell, the results aren’t amazing.
![fifa 15 demo lag fifa 15 demo lag](https://staticg.sportskeeda.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/fifa-15-logo-official-1410325218.jpg)
The settings launcher includes a fullscreen option (as you’d hope,) and allows you to crank up the resolution to (in my case) 1920x1080p.
![fifa 15 demo lag fifa 15 demo lag](https://trueefiles462.weebly.com/uploads/1/1/9/8/119845495/707511098.jpg)
FIFA 15 DEMO LAG 720P
Prior to that, PES 2015 was launching in a 720p window with no apparent way to change it.
![fifa 15 demo lag fifa 15 demo lag](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/CyZWWGQ8Uug/maxresdefault.jpg)
The first thing people trying the demo should know: there’s a Settings.exe hidden inside the Steam folder. Look, trying to avoid eye contract won’t stop me seeing your jaggies.