25 Aug 11, 01:38PM
(This post was last modified: 25 Aug 11, 01:43PM by RandumKiwi.)
Also, check if your card has "adaptive anti-aliasing" (specifically the adaptive part, as all good cards should be able to do normal anti-aliasing anyway) and turn it off.
Also check for anything that does "special stuff" to "optimize" graphics and turn these off (example, for myself, I turn off "Catalyst A.I." (ATi specific)), it's common for these things, that take a few shortcuts, to end up causing more harm than good.
Also, just for good measure, if all this fails, go into your windows graphics settings, change resolution to 800x600 and colour depth to 16bit (high colour). This probably won't do anything, but with really crappy cards, you never know.
Also check for anything that does "special stuff" to "optimize" graphics and turn these off (example, for myself, I turn off "Catalyst A.I." (ATi specific)), it's common for these things, that take a few shortcuts, to end up causing more harm than good.
Also, just for good measure, if all this fails, go into your windows graphics settings, change resolution to 800x600 and colour depth to 16bit (high colour). This probably won't do anything, but with really crappy cards, you never know.