

One core is used for 98% by Omsi, a second core for about 60%. 32 Ram Omsi on SSD) Omsi uses on average 16% of my CPU. On my I7 system (CPU i7 4790K 4.6 GHz, GPU Nvidia GTX 1070. On both of my systems, I have done extensive tests with the hardware at my disposal. In the case of both the GPU and the CPU, the clock speed is especially important. Even the fattest graphics card will not give Omsi the greatest performance. Omsi is a 32-bit program so it will never get everything out of a state-of-the-art CPU. With a little bit of trying, putting things in perspective, and a little luck, you can use Omsi in a very acceptable way. If you struggle for performance here and there, either bare the brunt of it, or stick to the more 'efficiently' made mods.Ī lot has been written about its performance over the past 9 years since the release of Omsi.

Perhaps adjust your settings until you find a sweet spot too, turn things down until performance is good, and then slowly work your way back up until it runs to slow (and just drop them back down a little).Īgain, OMSI is a world of 3rd-party-developed mods, and the quality and performance of these is down to the creator alone.
#OMSI 2 MODS BUSES PATCH#
On a more software front, as said, the 4GB patch is always a good place to start, as it will allow OMSI to use 4GB of RAM, over just 2GB, often preventing/delaying the dreaded white textures. If you are looking at improving your tower, perhaps finding high-speed RAM (always a good idea) as well as a CPU with high single core speeds would be preferable. OMSI, being an old, 32-bit game, relies (from what I know, and I could be wrong so please correct me if I am) both a single core of your processor, and 2GB RAM max.
#OMSI 2 MODS BUSES UPGRADE#
Of course, the obvious and most basic solution for improving your game speed is to upgrade the computer you're running OMSI on, although this is clearly not a particularly viable solution for most people.
