Most players leave 15–30% of their performance on the table in Valorant. Below is the exact order we tune systems on the bench, what each change buys you, and how to verify it instead of trusting placebo.
Competitive settings for Valorant
Visibility beats eye-candy. The goal is a flat, readable image at the highest stable frame rate Valorant can hold.
Drop shadows and volumetrics first — they cost the most for the least competitive value. Keep texture quality reasonable so callouts stay sharp.
- Shadows → Low / Off
- Effects, post-processing, motion blur → Low / Off
- View distance → High (you need to see them first)
- Anti-aliasing → light (TAA/low) to avoid shimmering edges
Lock your GPU control panel
Driver-level settings override in-game ones, so a misconfigured control panel quietly caps Valorant. We standardise these on every build.
Low Latency Mode set to Ultra (NVIDIA) or Anti-Lag (AMD) shaves real input delay when you're GPU-bound.
- Power management → Prefer maximum performance
- Low Latency Mode → Ultra (or Radeon Anti-Lag On)
- Texture filtering → Performance / High performance
- Disable in-game V-Sync; cap FPS just under your refresh instead
- ✓Shadows → Low / Off
- ✓Power management → Prefer maximum performance
Skip the manual work
Bravo applies every tweak in this guide — and hundreds more — in one click, fully reversible. Tuned per game, per rig.
See the tweak packs →