Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (2024)

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Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (1)

This is the start of a guide (or just sharing my notes and research). I’ll start by covering some of the basic settings for your GPU and Visual Pinball VPX 10.8. It is in no way a comprehensive guide to all the settings inside VPx as many settings are personal preferences, it’s more of a list of good settings to start with to help with basic performance and improving latency.

Settings can vary from machine to machine, but this guide has some of the recommendations I’ve collected from Community threads to help get the best performance from your VPX system.

This guide is based on using a NVidia GPU and the latest versions for VPX 10.8 beta and nightly builds.
Some of the settings may vary depending on the version of your GPU drivers and the version of Visual Pinball you have installed.

My System

  • Windows 10 Home Version 10.0.19045
  • NVIDIA GPU is 3060 Ti
  • NVIDIA Driver Version: 546.01
  • NVIDIA Control Panel Version 8.1.964
  • Visual Pinball Version 10.8 Build 1787

DISCLAIMER

ALWAYS BACKUP ANY FILES YOU ARE REPLACING BEFORE YOU START MAKING CHANGES TO YOUR SYSTEM.

I am a Virtual Pinball hobbyist and cannot be responsible for your system if you are not familiar with Windows and Visual Pinball or any other supporting software on your system.

If this guide doesn’t work for you, I don’t want to be responsible for you having a non working Virtual Pinball machine.

If your an unsure. STOP NOW and DO NOT go any further.

This guide assumes you are already familiar with Visual Pinball and PinUp Popper and will not be going into detail explaining everything about the system. If you are not familiar with Visual Pinball and PinUp Popper, you should not be following this guide.

Nvidia Control Panel Settings

Right click your mouse anywhere on a clean part of your desktop where no other windows are covering it.

Click onNVIDIA Control Panel.

Go into the Manage 3D Settings option on the left side menu.

In the GLOBAL SETTINGS tab on the right, set VERTICAL SYNC to OFF.

In the GLOBAL SETTINGS tab on the right, Set LOW LATENCY MODE to ULTRA.

Visual Pinball (VPX) 10.8

Open Visual Pinball but don’t go straight into a table. You can load a table after, but you want to stay with the Visual Pinball main window on the screen and the menu accessible.

Video/Graphics Options

Head into Preferences > Video/Graphics Options.

Input/Physics/Video Synchronization settings.

Synchronization Mode should be set to Frame Pacing.

Maximum Framerate should be set to your playfield monitor refresh rate.
This can give you better results in terms of smoothness and low lag.

Display Settings

Using the DX version of Visual Pinball, you should set your Display Mode to Exclusive Fullscreen.

Using the GL version of Visual Pinball, you should set your Display Mode to Windowed.

I hope these little tweaks can help you get the best performance out of your Virtual Pinball cabinet. Some people have different results based on the configuration of their computer, such as the Processor, GPU, Amount of RAM etc. These tweaks have helped me and I appreciate all the feedback I’ve ever received from this community.

If you have any feedback or would like to contribute, you can reach me on most of the well knows Virtual Pinball groups on Facebook @simonwalker.

SimonNWalker2024-01-18T15:23:03-05:00November 19, 2023|Guides, Visual Pinball|

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13 Comments

  1. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (13)

    BarretoDecember 3, 2023 at 8:34 am - Reply

    Hello, I have a similar setup and after update to 10.8.6 or 10.8.7, there’s a considerable performance degradation. Some tables that I never had problem, started to have FPS drop to 15/20 FPS in part of the gameplay. One good example is Back To The Future table. Are you facing similar issue? Have you found any solution?

    • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (14)

      SimonNWalkerDecember 4, 2023 at 3:04 pm - Reply

      Hmm. I have not had any issues personally. Everything is pretty smooth for me. I’ve been playing around with the GL version too and that runs a little smoother i think. Set it to Windowed mode, not exclusive full screen. See if that is any better.

  2. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (15)

    remyFebruary 6, 2024 at 6:07 am - Reply

    This settings helped to get the overall performance run smoother, thanks. In relation to this I have a performance question. I run on a intel i7 8700 processor and an 1070 GPU. I want to know if I get less stutter (mainly in newer VPW tables) when updating my GPU ( i run 2k 144hz) or do I also need to update the CPU. I find it hard to determine what the bottleneck is… Many tables run smooth with no latency on 144fps but some VPW tables stutter when lights go on or flicker. Is there a way to monitor what the bottleneck is (CPU – GPU)?

    • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (16)

      SimonNWalkerFebruary 6, 2024 at 8:59 am - Reply

      Hey Remy,
      There’s not an easy answer to that one. I wish there was a good guide to help with this but there are so many variables that can cause stutter, especially the newer VPW tables. CPU, GPU, different versions of VPX, Different Backglass options, etc. The best place to start is searching Google, but here is one person talking about the same thing. https://www.vpforums.org/index.php?showtopic=43716.
      First thing is to make sure you are running the latest version of all the software components required to run the VPW tables.
      Have you also tried both the regular version of VPX and the GL version? Some people get better results from the GL version.
      I would love to write an article/guide for this, but it really is a very complex subject with no easy answer.
      Good luck :)

  3. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (17)

    RemyFebruary 8, 2024 at 9:36 am - Reply

    Hello, thank you for your reply. I have the latest software vpx 10.8GL, mame 3.6. I didn’t test the regular vpx yet but tweaking my b2s backglasses had an enormous effect on the frame drops. Every table (some tuned down a bit) run on 144fps now, no lag. At the moment die hard (probably a gpu heavy table and an puppack) and fishtales are not optimal but perfectly playable. I think the cpu is the bottleneck because of the performance gain I got tweaking b2s. The 1070 also is not top of the bill, but I think i’m just going to enjoy playing for a while :)

    Thanks for your insights!

  4. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (18)

    PhilFebruary 14, 2024 at 11:31 am - Reply

    Thanks a lot for your guide, will give it a try!

  5. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (19)

    JOSELITO DE CAIMarch 2, 2024 at 11:59 am - Reply

    Thank you very much for the article. It has helped me. My boards are very smooth, and no lag on the ball. I have noticed a lot of improvement.

    • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (20)

      SimonNWalkerMarch 2, 2024 at 12:11 pm - Reply

      Glad it helped 😁

  6. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (21)

    steveMarch 30, 2024 at 4:44 pm - Reply

    When I try running the GL version, the frame rate is so bad, it looks like a slide show. I’m guessing I’m missing drivers or other support software it might need? Any idea what I ought to check? Thanks!

    • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (22)

      SimonNWalkerMarch 31, 2024 at 7:20 am - Reply

      Steve. It’s very difficult as everybody’s configuration is different and I’ve never had an issue using the GL version. I do always make sure that when I download the latest version from GitHub, I extract the zip files into the visual pinball folder by extracting the GL version last. I’m not sure if that makes a difference or not but you may want to try that.
      So go to GitHub and download the GL build number you want to test and extract the entire zip file into your visual pinball folder and see if that makes a difference. I also always make a backup of the files before I replace them just in case. Good luck!.

      • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (23)

        steveApril 3, 2024 at 9:51 pm - Reply

        I played around with it some more, and the one thing I discovered is that GL really doesn’t like full-screen mode at all on my cab. Didn’t expect to see that much of a difference, but switching it to windowed mode gave performance that seemed a lot more reasonable. Not necessarily “great”, but definitely way better than massive frame skipping I was seeing in full-screen.

        • Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (24)

          SimonNWalkerApril 4, 2024 at 8:15 pm - Reply

          That’s good news. Yeah I didn’t even think to recommend that. Makes a big difference.

  7. Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (25)

    BadaudMarch 31, 2024 at 8:30 am - Reply

    It helps a lot ! Thanks !!

Getting the Best Performance out of Visual Pinball (VPX) Version 10.8 - Pinball POV (2024)

FAQs

How much RAM do I need for virtual pinball? ›

Memory: 8GB (2x4GB) Ballistix Sport LT DDR4-2400 CL16 (16-16-16) RAM Kit (Amazon.de) Graphics Card: MSI GeForce GTX 1050Ti 4GT LP 4GB GDDR5 DVI/HDMI/DP Low Profile Graphics Card (Amazon.de) Power Supply: be quiet!

How is visual pinball different from virtual pinball? ›

Official titles of pinball games and machines are often licensed, credited and included in many virtual pinball games and simulation. Visual Pinball refers to a specific brand of pinball simulation software released in the year 2000. Visual pinball machines allow users to play, design and share their own creations.

What computer do I need for virtual pinball? ›

I'd recommend at least 8GB of motherboard RAM. This is enough memory for Windows plus the pinball simulator to run comfortably without "swapping" to disk. More RAM is generally better - particularly for future-proofing, considering that Windows and other software tends to need more memory on every update.

How much RAM for VPX? ›

For critical deployments, we do not recommend 2 GB RAM for VPX because the system operates in a memory-constrained environment. This might lead to scale, performance, or stability related issues. The recommended is 4 GB RAM or 8 GB RAM.

How much RAM should I give my virtual machine? ›

RAM Sizing for Specific Workloads and Operating Systems

A good starting point is to allocate 2 GB for Windows 10 or later desktops. If you want to use one of the hardware accelerated graphics features for 3D workloads, VMware recommends two virtual CPUs and 4 GB of RAM.

What TV to use for virtual pinball? ›

The backlight type does make some difference. LED backlights generally produce better color fidelity than fluorescent tubes did, and they use less power and run cooler. All of that is great for a pin cab, so if you're considering an LCD TV, I'd definitely give priority to the LED models.

What is the most realistic pinball game PC? ›

Pro Pinball, the world's most realistic pinball simulation is back, better than ever! Featuring the first of the ULTRA editions - Pro Pinball: Timeshock! All Reviews: Very Positive (250) - 81% of the 250 user reviews for this game are positive.

What computer do I need for virtual reality? ›

Virtual Reality Ready
Minimum Specs
CPUIntel® Core™ i3-6100, AMD FX4350 or greater Shop Now
Memory8GB RAM or more Shop Now
Video OutputCompatible HDMI 1.3 video output
USB Ports1 USB 3.0 port plus 2 USB 2.0 ports
2 more rows

How much should my virtual RAM be? ›

Microsoft recommends that you set virtual memory to be no less than 1.5 times and no more than 3 times the amount of RAM on your computer.

Do I need 32GB RAM for virtual machines? ›

The more RAM the better, but 8GB is probably a practical minimum. My previous host machine had 16GB, which quite enough to run several Hyper-V VMs simultaneously. My current host machine has 32GB, which is enough (just) to run 10 VMs at once, as I showed HERE.

How many virtual machines can I run on 8GB RAM? ›

DS1517+ (8 GB) can run 4 virtual machines with the same specifications as Virtual Machine B. For the fifth one, the NAS is short of 144 MB (6656 MB - 1360 MB x 5 = -144 MB).

Does 16GB RAM need virtual memory? ›

For systems with 16GB of RAM, virtual memory plays a significant role in ensuring that all processes run smoothly, especially when dealing with high-demand applications.

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