NVIDIA's G-SYNC Pulsar Update Enhances Low FPS Gaming with New Features and Fixes

March 13, 2026
NVIDIA's G-SYNC Pulsar Update Enhances Low FPS Gaming with New Features and Fixes
  • NVIDIA’s firmware update (version 1.1.4) for G-SYNC Pulsar monitors fixes sharp double images and the in-monitor FPS indicator when running below 90 FPS, and adds a fixed 60Hz strobing mode for games capped at 60 FPS.

  • The update aims to reduce motion blur at low refresh rates, addressing a long-standing G-Sync Pulsar weakness for under-90 FPS gameplay.

  • Installation is browser-based and requires no extra software; users connect the monitor via cable and run the official web utility.

  • The process takes about 5 to 10 minutes and includes a built-in recovery to retry the update if something goes wrong.

  • The news is sourced from NVIDIA, with additional context from Wccftech.

  • Officially supported browsers are Chrome 61, Edge 79, and Opera 48; the utility works across Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and ChromeOS, but not iOS.

  • The update relies on embedded Pulsar hardware within each monitor’s scaler chip and does not require a daughterboard.

  • This update underscores the value of updatable G-Sync Pulsar modules, enabling firmware improvements without replacing the monitor.

  • NVIDIA showcased G-Sync Pulsar at Computex 2025 and CES 2026, highlighting the goal of reducing object hold time by synchronizing backlight pulses with frame delivery.

  • The firmware supports models such as Acer Predator XB273U F5, AOC AGON PRO AG276QSG2, ASUS ROG Strix Pulsar XG27AQNGV, and MSI MPG 272QRF X36, with roll-back options to earlier versions.

  • G-Sync Pulsar blends VRR with Ultra Low Motion Blur for high perceived smoothness, though current adoption is limited to a select set of monitors.

  • Technically, backlight strobe is synchronized to frame delivery so pulses occur when frames are stable, minimizing motion smear.

Summary based on 5 sources


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