GeForce RTX 5090, How to

How to Calm Down CPU/GPU Spikes on RTX 5090 and Kill Those Annoying One-Off Stutters

How to Calm Down CPUGPU Spikes on RTX 5090 and Kill Those Annoying One-Off Stutters

Even if your RTX 5090 is showing 90–140 FPS at 4K, you can still get random half-second freezes or tiny hitches when you turn the camera, enter a city or trigger a big explosion. That’s not your card “being weak” – it’s short CPU/GPU spikes blowing up your frametimes. The fix isn’t to nuke all your graphics settings; it’s to calm down a few specific systems (foliage, crowds, volumetrics, RT, FOV, background noise, temps) so the whole pipeline runs smoothly instead of surging.

This article shows you how to calm down CPU/GPU spikes that cause those annoying one-off stutters on an RTX 5090/RTX 50-series rig, without turning your 4K ultra build into a potato.


1. What a “Spike” Looks Like (and Why FPS Lies About It)

Before you touch any settings, it’s worth understanding what you’re actually chasing.

With any decent overlay running (Afterburner, vendor tool, in-game graph), you’ll see:

  • FPS counter: mostly stable (for example 100–120 FPS)
  • Frametime graph: lots of flat, calm 8–12 ms lines
 and then sudden spikes to 30–50 ms
  • CPU/GPU usage: brief moments where either CPU or GPU slam to 100% for a second

You feel that as:

  • A one-off hitch when you turn into a busy street
  • A freeze just as several effects go off at once
  • A judder when the weather changes, a cutscene starts, or you enter a new biome

The aim is not simply “more FPS”. It’s:

Flatter frametime + fewer spikes = fewer hitches, even if your average FPS doesn’t change much.

The RTX 5090 already has the brute force; you’re just making its workload saner.


2. GPU Spikes: Taming the “Burst-Heavy” Visual Settings

Your 5090 can brute-force a lot of eye candy at 4K, but a few options hit it in short, brutal bursts. Those are the ones that create spikes.

2.1 Foliage, grass and clutter

Dense foliage looks nice, but it’s a performance landmine:

  • Thousands of tiny meshes to draw
  • Often animated by wind/physics
  • Frequently shadowed and lit individually

Every time you spin through a forest or grassy hillside at 4K, the GPU and CPU both get hammered.

What to do:

  • Foliage/Grass Quality or Density: drop by one step (Ultra → High, High → Medium)
  • Foliage Draw Distance: pull back slightly
  • Extra clutter / debris: reduce if the game exposes it

You’re not stripping the world bare; you’re shaving just enough density that the renderer doesn’t choke when you pan quickly.


2.2 Volumetric fog, clouds and god rays

Volumetrics are some of the heaviest features in modern engines:

  • Volumetric fog banks
  • Shafts of light through trees and windows
  • Thick smoke, dust and storm effects

They can be especially spiky when:

  • Weather transitions
  • You step into a fog-heavy area
  • The sun angle changes and beams suddenly fill the screen

What to do:

  • Volumetric Quality / Volumetric Lighting: Ultra → High, or High → Medium
  • Lower any separate volumetric resolution sliders one notch
  • Disable any “Cinematic Volumetrics” toggle and stick to the normal High preset

You still get atmosphere and depth, but the worst burst loads are trimmed away.


2.3 Shadows and contact shadows

Shadows touch a lot of pixels and geometry every frame:

  • High-resolution shadow maps
  • Long shadow distances
  • Extra contact shadow passes for tiny detail

They’re a classic frametime spike source whenever lots of dynamic lights or complex geometry enter view.

What to do:

  • Shadow Quality: drop one tier (Ultra → High, High → Medium)
  • Contact Shadows / Extra shadow passes: reduce or disable if possible

At 4K, you rarely notice the downgrade, but you’ll definitely notice fewer “why did the camera hitch as I stepped into the sun?” moments.


2.4 Over-the-top ray tracing and path tracing

On a 5090 you absolutely can use ray tracing at 4K – but the very top presets are often overkill for real gameplay:

  • Full path tracing / extreme GI
  • “Psycho” RT quality modes
  • Super-sampled RT reflections on every surface

These settings tend to spike hardest in:

  • Dense cities with puddles, glass and neon
  • Interiors with lots of small lights and glossy materials
  • Weather events (rain, fog, night-time storms)

What to do:

  • Turn RT On, but run it one step below maximum
  • Disable ultra-extreme RT toggles (“Psycho”, “Cinematic RT”, etc.) unless the game still holds up beautifully
  • Combine RT with DLSS Quality so the GPU has breathing room when scenes get complex

You keep the cinematic lighting, but remove the worst hit to frametimes.


3. CPU Spikes: FOV, Crowds and Simulation

At 4K on a 5090, you’ll often be CPU-limited in open worlds or big hubs. Short CPU spikes matter just as much as GPU spikes.

3.1 Field of View (FOV)

FOV doesn’t just change what you see – it changes how much the CPU and GPU have to simulate and draw:

  • Higher FOV = more world visible
  • More enemies, physics objects, AI and draw calls in view
  • At 4K, that’s a lot of work per frame

Maxing FOV “because pros do it” can quietly increase spike frequency.

What to do:

  • Use the lowest FOV that still feels comfortable and gives you decent awareness
  • If you’re running max FOV and see spikes in cities or big rooms, drop it a few degrees and re-test your hot spots

Just a small reduction can lighten CPU load without making you feel tunnel-visioned.


3.2 Crowd density, pedestrians and background AI

Anything labelled:

  • Crowd Density / Population Density
  • Traffic Density / Ambient NPCs

is heavy on the CPU:

  • Each NPC needs AI, animation, physics and sometimes audio
  • Cities and hubs become CPU storm zones

What to do:

  • Reduce crowd and traffic density by one step
  • Turn off or lower any “extra simulation detail” sliders (background AI, ambient life, etc.)

You still get a lively world, but your CPU isn’t spiking every time you walk into a busy plaza.


3.3 Physics, destruction and “simulation detail”

Some games let you crank:

  • Physics quality
  • Destructible environment detail
  • Ragdoll counts and persistence

It’s fun, but it can absolutely nuke CPU frametimes when lots of things happen at once.

What to do:

  • Set physics/destruction sliders to Medium instead of Ultra
  • Limit ragdoll count/persistence where options exist

You’ll still get satisfying feedback, just without the hidden CPU bombs.


4. Temps, Power and Clocks: Stop the Card Punching Its Own Brakes

Another source of spikes: your RTX 5090 or CPU hitting thermal or power limits, then briefly downclocking.

4.1 Watch for thermal and power throttling

Signs this is part of your problem:

  • GPU temps climbing into the mid-80s°C and above in heavy scenes
  • GPU core clocks dropping by a few hundred MHz when things get intense
  • CPU hotspots spiking hard in long sessions

When the hardware slams the brakes, your frametime graph spikes with it.

What to do:

  • Make sure the case has:
    • At least one/two intakes at the front
    • One exhaust at the rear/top
    • No glass panel pressed directly against the GPU fans
  • Clean dust filters and radiators
  • Use your card’s software to set a slightly more aggressive fan curve so temps stabilise in the 60–70s°C rather than flirting with the limit

If you’re comfortable with it, a light undervolt can also help: same performance at lower voltage and heat, which often means steadier clocks and fewer spikes. If that sounds scary, skip it – good airflow and sensible fan behaviour already go a long way.


5. Storage and Background Noise: Kill “Free” Stutters

Even with perfect settings and thermals, you can still get one-off hitches from:

  • Slow or full drives
  • Background apps suddenly waking up
  • Overlays and launchers doing “quick checks” mid-match

5.1 Storage and streaming

Modern AAA titles stream in:

  • High-res textures
  • Geometry and animations
  • Audio, cinematics, scripts

from disk constantly. If the drive can’t keep up, you get:

  • Freeze when turning quickly into a new area
  • Texture “popping in” late
  • Cutscene or dialogue pauses

What to do:

  • Install main games on a fast NVMe SSD
  • Keep that drive with plenty of free space, not pinned at 95–99%
  • Avoid running big downloads or file operations on the same drive while gaming

5.2 Background apps and overlays

Little things add up:

  • Browsers with multiple video tabs
  • Game launchers doing background updates
  • RGB suites and “hardware dashboards” polling constantly
  • Additional performance overlays stacked on top of each other

Each one can cause a tiny CPU/disk spike that lands as a frametime spike.

For serious sessions:

  • Close browsers, update launchers before playing, and minimise overlays
  • Keep just your launcher + game + one lean performance overlay open

Think of it as “clean boot, clean session” for your RTX 5090.


6. Sync, VRR and Caps: Frame Pacing That Actually Behaves

Bad sync and sloppy caps can turn small spikes into obvious stutters.

6.1 Use VRR properly

On a 4K G-Sync/FreeSync monitor or TV:

  • Enable VRR in display settings and NVIDIA Control Panel
  • Make sure the panel is at native 4K and maximum refresh (120/144 Hz)
  • Let VRR absorb normal FPS wobble so it doesn’t show as obvious judder

6.2 Don’t stack V-Sync everywhere

Layering V-Sync in:

  • The driver
  • The game
  • Your TV’s motion smoothing / “game smoothing”

is a recipe for extra latency and weird stutter.

Pick one approach:

  • Competitive feel: V-Sync Off, VRR On, FPS capped just below refresh
  • Smooth cinematic: V-Sync On in driver, Off in-game, VRR On, cap just below refresh

Either way, avoid multiple V-Sync layers and definitely turn off TV motion smoothing – Game Mode only.

6.3 Cap FPS to calm peaks

A good FPS cap:

  • Stops the GPU from bouncing up to silly FPS in easy scenes then crashing down in heavy ones
  • Keeps you inside your VRR window
  • Reduces power spikes and noise

For 4K on a 120/144 Hz panel:

  • Cap at 117–118 FPS (120 Hz) or 140–141 FPS (144 Hz) for high-refresh play
  • Or 70–90 FPS for a cinematic profile with ultra visuals

Use either the in-game limiter or NVIDIA’s per-game Max Frame Rate – not both.


7. A Simple Before/After Method to Prove It Worked

You don’t need a full benchmark suite, just a basic routine:

  1. Pick a stress spot
    • Busy city street, forest path, or scripted set-piece
  2. Run it before changes
    • Record average FPS plus a quick look at the frametime graph
    • Note obvious hitch points (“turning left at the market stalls hitches every time”)
  3. Apply targeted tweaks
    • Foliage down one step, volumetrics down one, crowds down one, sync fixed, FPS cap set
  4. Run the same spot again
    • Ignore tiny FPS differences, focus on:
      • Are spikes smaller or gone?
      • Does that specific hitch still occur?
      • Does camera movement feel smoother?

If those trouble spots feel better and your frametime graph looks less like a heart monitor, you’ve successfully calmed the CPU/GPU spikes – and your RTX 5090’s raw power is finally showing up as consistently smooth 4K gameplay, not just a pretty FPS number.

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