EA and Hazelight Studios’ action-adventure game, Split Fiction, is now available on PC, and we’ve put together the best settings for getting optimized performance on mid-end system specs.
Before we delve into the best settings for Split Fiction on PC, make sure you’ve updated your GPU drivers and Windows to their latest respective versions. Additionally, disable or close any unnecessary background applications in order to reduce the CPU overhead as much as possible. The settings detailed ahead should provide a more optimized balance between graphics and frame rate compared to the presets available in-game.

Split Fiction Best Settings
The settings below are there to serve as a broad starting point for further optimization based on your specific hardware specs. As a result, you may need to further tweak some settings until you find a sweet spot based on your display’s refresh rate and the overall performance you seek.
GRAPHICS
- Window Mode: Fullscreen
- Resolution: as per the max resolution of your display or preference
- Anti-Aliasing / Upscaling: AMD FSR 3.1
- FSR Mode: Quality
- VSync: Off on a VRR or G-Sync supported display, otherwise On
- Framerate: Unlocked on a VRR or G-Sync supported display, otherwise capped to preferred frame rate
- Texture Quality: High
- Shadow Quality: High
- Detail Level: High
- Effects Quality: High
- Shader Quality: High
- Anisotropic Filtering: 16X
- Post-Processing Quality: High
Does Split Fiction Run On Steam Deck?
GRAPHICS
- Window Mode: Borderless Windowed
- Anti-Aliasing / Upscaling: AMD FSR 3.1
- FSR Mode: Quality
- VSync: On
- Framerate: Unlocked
- Texture Quality: Medium
- Shadow Quality: Low
- Detail Level: Low
- Effects Quality: Low
- Shader Quality: Low
- Anisotropic Filtering: 4X
- Post-Processing Quality: Medium
As seen in the video above, these settings allow Split Fiction to run at a frame rate that is mostly in the high 50s on the Steam Deck during gameplay. While a variable frame rate isn’t ideal, the game is playable in practice.