hey, ive got a qn about locking fps.
are there any pros or cons to doing this?
i've seen a lot of pros locking in 300fps, some 350.
I think pros got into the idea that fps higher than 300/350 dont change the feeling of the game. BUT if you left it uncapped, the feeling of the fps dropping from 800 to ,idk, 650, 500, 400 can be felt in the game. So they capped at 300/350 to not have that dropping feeling even when youre with a super pc.
When you have a really good pc but your fps still goes under 250, i think locking wont change anything.
When you have a excellent good and your fps doesnt drop down 300, it's interesting to test it locked in 300.
Personally i like the feeling of extremely high and smooth fps some inside places in VAL delives, so i left it uncapped, but after you feel the drop even with your fps higher than 350/400, you'll see this happens a lot of times.
This comment section is full of snake oil so let me just say this locking your fps at an fps higher than your monitor's refresh rate but lower than the average fps you currently get can increase the overall stability of your game (reduce the amount of frame drops and inconsistencies in frame timing etc) and reduce screen tears. Unlocking will likely cause a slightly less stable performance. Overall, I would recommend locking it just because it'll make the experience slightly more consistent but its not a big difference or something that will affect your rank unless you're extremely high elo and even then it likely wont.
Other that that it doesn't fucking matter. "Wasting performance" by leaving it unlocked doesn't matter unless your running other cpu/gpu intensive programs simultaneously at a lower priority than valorant. It wont strain your cpu to the point that it dies significantly sooner unless your playing for upwards of 8 hours a day (and that's time in game not just in menus) and even then it probably wont most cpu's are made to last way beyond the amount of time it takes for the average consumer to replace them and/or the entire computer they're in.
tldr: its an incredibly minor personal preference that practically doesn't matter.