PUBG developers, Bluehole, stated: 'Since the release of PUBG 1.0 earlier this year, our team has been dedicated to enhancing various features, weapons, game modes, and more. Yet, performance concerns remain unresolved. Hence, we are diligently working to elevate the game's performance.'
PUBG promises significant performance upgrades are on the horizon.
Among Bluehole's top priority changes is optimizing the company's servers to achieve better performance. Developers also acknowledge that in past bug fixes, users primarily reported overall slow performance issues. The root cause stems from client-side and some server-side issues.
Two specific issues identified by Bluehole include:
- When vehicles traverse different road surfaces, various ground materials generate excessive effects, overloading players' GPUs.
- Another reason for GPU overload (and FPS reduction) relates to processed lighting effects.
Fixes for current issues are under development. On the client side, Bluehole states they are planning to optimize certain features, vehicles, and loading speed with a range of bug fixes and enhancements on the client side, including core structures of Miramar and Sanhok to improve map loading speed.
The number of PUBG players has decreased in recent months, from over 3 million players to just 1.5 million players. Meanwhile, the latest Fortnite update from Epic Games achieved 4 million players in the past February.
If your computer's specifications aren't powerful enough to play PUBG, try downloading and playing PUBG Mobile on your phone instead. PUBG Mobile supports both Android and iOS.
If you're new to PUBG, check out PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds game shortcuts for a better gaming experience.
Java stands as the most widely used software platform globally, with Serialization at its core, being the source of Java's security vulnerabilities. Therefore, Oracle plans to cease support for Java Serialization to thwart potential attacks from malicious entities and viruses in the near future. You can follow more details on this issue in the article 'Oracle Plans to Cease Support for Java Serialization' on Mytour.