Best Fortnite settings for Arc A580
Recommended at 1080p: expect 57–103 FPS after applying the playbook below. Your Arc A580 is the limiting factor in Fortnite.
At 1080p, Fortnite's rendering pipeline saturates a D-tier Intel GPU before any CPU draw-call limit. Settings that reduce GPU load (shader quality, shadow detail, particle resolution, upscaling) produce the biggest FPS gains. Settings that ease CPU work (view distance, draw distance) help less.
Apply these settings in Fortnite
Ranked by FPS impact for tier D hardware. Apply the high-impact ones first — top three usually account for 60% of the gain.
Performance Mode is the single biggest FPS lever in Fortnite — 30–80% more FPS for tier D hardware. Apply this first; everything else is secondary.
Off is competitive-standard. Big FPS gain AND it makes spotting players easier — they don't get extra cover from their own shadow.
Far shows builds and players sooner. Don't drop this below Far for competitive play, even on low-tier GPUs — you'll get killed by people you can't see yet.
Particles + materials. Low keeps frametimes flat in heavy fight scenarios.
Intel-native upscaling at Quality. Adds ~20–30% FPS with minimal aliasing tradeoff at 1080p.
Always on so you can monitor stability. Spike-in-fights = you're CPU-bound; consistent = GPU.
Intel-specific tweaks
These are in Intel Arc Control.
Intel-native upscaler with the best image quality on Arc cards. Equivalent to DLSS Quality preset.
Set per-game profiles in Arc Control with maximum performance. Arc relies more on driver-side tuning than NVIDIA/AMD.
About the Arc A580
The Arc A580 (2023 release, 8GB VRAM) is a entry-level card. At 1080p in Fortnite, the biggest FPS levers are upscaling, shadow detail, and brand-specific latency reducers (Intel XeSS). The settings above are the floor — for a fully personalized playbook factoring CPU, RAM, and your monitor refresh rate, run BetterFPS.