- INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 DRIVERS
- INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 DRIVER
- INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 FULL
- INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 WINDOWS 10
"~" = Represents a number in the model name (usually 0, 3, 5, 7, or 9) RED = Cards that will only play at lower graphical settings, but may not be supported. ORANGE = Cards that will play The Sims 4, but not at higher graphical settings. The following list is now complete! (as far as I know)īLACK = Cards that meet the recommended requirements
INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 FULL
I’m back again with a new list (the full list will be coming soon) of graphics cards that are confirmed to work with The Sims 4, including some information of what kind of performance to expect. Some of you may remember my previous “Supported Graphics Card List” that was created for The Sims 3, a semi-unofficial fan-made list of graphics cards that had been confirmed to work with the game. Remark 2: on a system with NVIDIA GPU (with GeForce 417.35) + Intel GPU (driver v6444), these tweaks are useless too, because Intel OpenCL support is properly enabled.ANNOUNCEMENT (): I am in the process of updating this thread, so be warned that some of the cards listed here may no longer be supported! Bare with me
INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 DRIVER
Remark 1: on a system with no AMD GPU, these tweaks are useless, because Intel OpenCL support is properly enabled after Intel driver installation. Once these values have been created, the OpenCL support for Intel CPU and GPU finally appeared: In the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Khronos\OpenCL\Vendors key, create a DWORD value with the following name:Ĭ:\Windows\System32\DriverStore\FileRepository\iigd_dch.inf_amd64_f02a6686365638a8\IntelOpenC元2.dll I found this path in the registry (look for IntelOpenCL_圆4_CpuRuntime or IntelOpenCL_x32_CpuRuntime values): In the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Khronos\OpenCL\Vendors key, create a DWORD value with the following name:Ĭ:\Windows\System32\DriverStore\FileRepository\iigd_dch.inf_amd64_f02a6686365638a8\IntelOpenCL64.dll These values properly enabled OpenCL for Intel CPU/GPU on my test system when AMD Adrenalin 18.12.3 driver was already installed. On my test system, the first key was not present and the second key was present but with a value that didn’t work… This key lists all OpenCL implementations (see the cl_khr_icd OpenCL extension for more details). For 32-bit apps on Windows 64-bit, the key is: KEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WOW6432Node\Khronos\OpenCL\Vendors. The OpenCL ICD (Installable Client Driver, the OpenCL.dll shipped with the graphics driver) tries to load all OpenCL implementations described in the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Khronos\OpenCL\Vendors key (64-bit app on Win64 or 32-bit app on WIn32) of the registry. Here is the tweak to enable OpenCL support for Intel processors.
Let’s see the same support with a 64-bit app like the prototype of the upcoming GPU Shark 2: – CPU: Intel Core i7-8700K + UHD Graphics 630 + Intel v6444 driver
But here is a way to enable the Intel OpenCL support on Windows 32-bit and 64-bit with a simple registry tweak.īefore tweaking the registry, here is the OpenCL support on my test system:
INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 DRIVERS
Probably a savory story of drivers (AMD?). So why is Intel OpenCL support disabled when an AMD Radeon GPU is present? Sorry, I don’t have the answer. If you search for Intel OpenCL related files with Explorer or Regedit, you will quickly find that all OpenCL driver files are there.
INTEL HD GRAPHICS 5500 VS AMD RADEON R7 M260 WINDOWS 10
On a Windows 10 system with an AMD Radeon GPU and an Intel GPU (desktop or notebook), with graphics drivers installed for both GPUs, I bet you will see that OpenCL is limited to the AMD GPU only.