Adaptive Sync smooths variable frame delivery, while an in-game frame rate limiter keeps the game from outrunning the monitor’s refresh ceiling. The best setup is usually Adaptive Sync on, V-Sync managed carefully, and an FPS cap a few frames below the display’s maximum refresh rate.
Does your game look smooth in one scene, then tear, hitch, or feel delayed when the action gets lighter and FPS shoots upward? A simple cap, such as 141 FPS on a 144Hz monitor or 237 FPS on a 240Hz monitor, can keep the display inside its smoothest operating window without wasting GPU power. You’ll learn when to use the in-game limiter, when to switch to a driver cap, and how to tune the setup for gaming monitors, office displays, and portable smart screens.
The Core Interaction: Adaptive Sync Needs a Frame Window
Adaptive Sync, also called VRR, works by letting the monitor vary its refresh timing to match the GPU’s real-time frame output. This helps reduce tearing and stutter when FPS fluctuates below the panel’s maximum refresh rate. A variable refresh rate display is most effective when the game stays inside the monitor’s supported range instead of constantly hitting the top limit.
A frame rate limiter does the other half of the job. It sets a ceiling on how many frames the game renders, so the GPU does not keep producing frames the monitor cannot cleanly display. On a 144Hz screen, for example, an uncapped game bouncing between 138 FPS and 180 FPS can leave Adaptive Sync in control below 144 FPS, then push beyond the panel’s ceiling and risk tearing or V-Sync behavior above it. A 141 FPS cap keeps the game just under the top edge, where Adaptive Sync can keep matching refresh to output.
That is why the practical target is not “cap exactly at refresh rate.” The more reliable target is slightly below it. The KTC setup note uses common examples such as 117 FPS for 120Hz, 141 FPS for 144Hz, 162 FPS for 165Hz, and 237 FPS for 240Hz.
Monitor Refresh Rate |
Practical FPS Cap |
Why It Works |
120Hz |
117 FPS |
Leaves room below the VRR ceiling |
144Hz |
141 FPS |
Avoids repeatedly hitting fixed-refresh behavior |
165Hz |
162 FPS |
Keeps pacing controlled during light scenes |
240Hz |
237 FPS |
Preserves high responsiveness while reducing tearing risk |
Why Not Just Leave FPS Uncapped?
Higher FPS can reduce input latency and make motion feel smoother, but it also increases GPU and CPU load, heat, fan noise, and power draw. Excessive FPS can also cause instability or bugs in some games, especially when game logic or physics behaves poorly at very high frame rates.
For a high-end gaming monitor, uncapped FPS may look attractive in a benchmark overlay, but it is not always the best experience. If a 240Hz display is paired with a GPU that pushes 310 FPS in menus, 230 FPS in open areas, and 165 FPS in heavy fights, you are no longer optimizing for a stable visual pipeline. You are letting the system swing between display states, GPU load levels, and frame pacing patterns.

For an office productivity display or a portable smart screen, the case for a cap can be even stronger. Many of these displays have lower refresh rates, tighter thermal limits, or USB-C power constraints. If a portable 120Hz screen is connected to a laptop, capping around 117 FPS can reduce unnecessary rendering load while keeping motion smooth enough for lightweight gaming or creative previews.

In-Game Limiters vs. Driver Limiters
A good in-game limiter is usually the first place to start because it can control frame production close to the game engine. Latency and frame-time testing discussions often show that there is no universal best limiter, because results depend on the game engine, pacing behavior, and whether the game respects its own cap correctly. A well-coded in-game FPS limiter can stop unnecessary rendering earlier than a downstream tool.
The problem is consistency. Some in-game caps are excellent, some are coarse, and some fail under specific rendering features. In one flight simulator, users reported that the built-in limiter did not behave as expected when frame generation was enabled, and the working path was to cap externally through the GPU control panel while keeping frame generation active. That frame rate limit setting example matters because generated frames can complicate what the game thinks it is limiting.
A practical tuning workflow is simple. Start with the in-game limiter at a near-ceiling cap, then watch motion, frame pacing, and input feel. If the cap is ignored, menus run wild, frame times look uneven, or generated-frame features interfere, move the cap to the GPU driver. External frame limiters can also help, but the strongest starting point is the game’s own limiter; escalate only when it behaves poorly.
Where V-Sync Fits In
Adaptive Sync is not the same as V-Sync. V-Sync traditionally prevents tearing by making rendered frames wait for the monitor’s fixed refresh cycle, which can add latency or cause visible drops when FPS falls below target. Adaptive Sync changes the monitor’s refresh timing instead, so frames can be displayed more naturally while the game remains within the VRR range.

The nuance is the top of the range. Once FPS exceeds the monitor’s maximum refresh rate, Adaptive Sync cannot make a 144Hz panel display 160 unique refreshes per second. In display setup discussions, the key point is that VRR handles tearing below the ceiling, while V-Sync can act as a guard only at the top edge. The monitor’s supported refresh range is the boundary that determines when VRR stops being enough.
For most players, the balanced setup is Adaptive Sync on, driver-level V-Sync on as a ceiling guard, in-game V-Sync off unless a game requires it, and the FPS cap set just below the monitor maximum. Because the limiter keeps FPS from actually hitting the V-Sync ceiling most of the time, the added latency risk is reduced while tearing protection remains available if the cap is imperfect.
Competitive Gaming: Latency vs. Visual Control
For competitive shooters and racing games, the best answer depends on what bothers you more: tearing or theoretical latency. Adaptive Sync with a near-ceiling FPS cap usually gives the stronger real-world balance because motion stays readable and the game avoids slamming into the refresh ceiling. Adaptive Sync does not increase FPS; it improves how existing frames are presented.
If you play on a 240Hz monitor and your system runs between 180 and 235 FPS, Adaptive Sync is doing meaningful work. Cap at roughly 237 FPS and you preserve the high-refresh feel while avoiding the upper-edge behavior that can reintroduce tearing or V-Sync-style waiting. If your system constantly renders far above 240 FPS and you are chasing the absolute lowest latency for esports, V-Sync off with a higher or uncapped frame rate may feel faster, but tearing becomes part of the trade.
Display quality still matters. Gaming performance should not be judged by a compatibility label alone, because strong results also depend on refresh rate, motion handling, and low input lag. Testing of over 390 monitors reinforces a useful buying principle: certification helps, but the panel’s real behavior decides the experience.
Troubleshooting Common Problems
If Adaptive Sync feels worse after adding a cap, check the refresh rate first. The operating system, GPU driver, and monitor’s on-screen menu should all be set to the panel’s highest real refresh rate. A 165Hz monitor accidentally running at 60Hz will make every FPS cap decision feel wrong.
If you see flicker, brightness shifts, or occasional black screens, the cap may be too close to a sensitive VRR boundary, the cable may not have enough bandwidth, or the monitor may have limited VRR behavior. Adaptive Sync setup guidance favors a full-bandwidth display cable for many VRR configurations and suggests lowering the cap by another frame or two when instability appears.
If the in-game limiter does nothing, disable frame generation temporarily and test again. The flight simulator case showed that frame generation could make the internal limiter appear broken, while an external GPU driver cap restored control. That does not mean every game behaves the same way, but it is the first switch worth testing when the FPS number refuses to obey the game menu.
Best Practical Setup
For a modern gaming monitor, enable Adaptive Sync or VRR in the monitor menu, enable the matching VRR feature in the GPU driver, set the display to its highest refresh rate, and cap FPS two to four frames below that refresh rate. Use the in-game limiter first when it behaves cleanly, then switch to a driver-level cap if the game ignores limits, has unstable menus, or uses frame generation in a way that bypasses the internal cap.
For an office display or portable smart screen, use the same logic but tune more conservatively. A 120Hz USB-C portable display paired with a laptop does not benefit much from runaway FPS, especially if heat, fan noise, or battery drain matter. A 117 FPS cap with Adaptive Sync enabled is a sharper value play than letting the GPU spend extra power on frames the screen cannot use.
Adaptive Sync and frame rate limiters are not competing features. The limiter keeps the game inside the display’s best operating zone, and Adaptive Sync makes that zone feel fluid. Get the cap right, verify the game actually respects it, and your monitor stops being a passive panel and starts behaving like a tuned performance surface.





