Why kernel-level anti-cheat software is a ticking time bomb for your handheld’s battery life
Let's say you're playing a competitive game on your ROG Ally X or Lenovo Legion Go. You drop your settings, cap the frame rate to 60fps, and lower the APU wattage to a conservative 12W. Yet somehow your battery percentage is still plummeting much faster than it does when you're playing a massive, visually demanding single-player title.
Let’s say you’re playing a competitive game on your ROG Ally X or Lenovo Legion Go. You drop your settings, cap the frame rate to 60fps, and lower the APU wattage to a conservative 12W. Yet somehow your battery percentage is still plummeting much faster than it does when you’re playing a massive, visually demanding single-player t**le.
Giray Koçoğlu
Turkey
Turkey
Published by: aplhsindia.in
