Best CS2 settings for RTX 5090
Recommended at 4k: expect 165–236 FPS after applying the playbook below. RTX 5090 pairs cleanly with CS2 — no single component is the wall.
Your RTX 5090 and CS2 are paired well — neither is the runaway bottleneck. The biggest FPS gains come from a balanced cut: drop a couple of expensive effects (shadows, volumetrics) without touching what makes the game look like CS2.
Apply these settings in CS2
Ranked by FPS impact for tier S hardware. Apply the high-impact ones first — top three usually account for 60% of the gain.
NVIDIA-specific tweaks
These are in NVIDIA Control Panel + GeForce App.
Single biggest input-latency improvement on NVIDIA. ~10–25 ms reduction depending on title. Always on.
Windows Settings → Display → Graphics. Enables CPU offload for GPU work scheduling. Small but consistent gain.
NVIDIA Control Panel → 3D Settings → set per game. Forces full clocks during play.
How CS2 runs on RTX 5090
CS2 runs on Valve's Source 2 engine, which uses a modern Vulkan-first renderer. The engine handles 32GB VRAM well but is sensitive to driver overhead — NVIDIA's Vulkan driver is mature and performs well. Map complexity varies significantly: Dust 2 runs 40% lighter than Anubis.
At this hardware tier, every setting matters. Start with everything on Low, then selectively raise Texture Quality and Anti-Aliasing if you have FPS headroom above your target.
Known quirks for RTX 5090 in CS2
- •Shader precompilation stutter affects the first 2-3 matches after driver updates
- •MSAA is extremely expensive in Source 2 — use FXAA or TAA instead
- •FPS caps at refresh rate when V-Sync is on — disable V-Sync and use NVIDIA Reflex instead
How we rank these settings
BetterFPS ranks each setting by its FPS-per-quality-cost ratio for your GPU tier. We pull from engine documentation, community benchmarks, and driver release notes to estimate each setting's render cost on NVIDIA S-tier hardware at 4k. High-impact settings are those where disabling or lowering them recovers significant frame time with minimal perceptible quality loss. The personalized optimizer refines these further using your CPU, RAM, and monitor refresh rate.
About the RTX 5090
The RTX 5090 (2025 release, 32GB VRAM) is a flagship card. At 4k in CS2, the biggest FPS levers are upscaling, shadow detail, and brand-specific latency reducers (NVIDIA Reflex). The settings above are the floor — for a fully personalized playbook factoring CPU, RAM, and your monitor refresh rate, run BetterFPS.
Keep this playbook current
CS2 patches can shift what’s optimal overnight. Lock in auto-updates so you never lose FPS to a patch you didn’t notice.