It turns out that people playing Fortnite at 30 frames per second are at a slight disadvantage in shootouts compared to opponents who are operating at higher frame rates. Speculation on the subject has been going on for some time in the Fortnite community, but a recent test by Digital Foundry has introduced some interesting new data into the discussion.
Playing Fortnite on PC at three different frame rates, 30fps, 60fps, and 300fps, Digital Foundry discovered that guns fire approximately 5.24% slower at 30fps than after 60fps. The test revolved around going into the gameâs Playground mode, placing metal walls in a line, firing a basic assault rifle at them and seeing how long it took to destroy all of them.
At 30fps it took 27.52 seconds, but at 60fps it only took 26.08 seconds. At 300fps the difference was a marginal two tenths of a second. This means that people with souped-up PCs running the game at a high frame rate arenât getting any discernible advantage out of it when it comes to rate of fire. People playing at 30fps, on the other hand, are doing a little less damage per second than their 60fps peers when using the same weapons.
Lots of discussion about higher Fortnite fire rates with higher frame-rates. We noted a 5.2% increase in fire rate at 60fps vs 30fps in this test, but no further advantage beyond that. Epic says it will be fixed in an update. pic.twitter.com/lmbgNOhrLR
â Digital Foundry (@digitalfoundry) January 23, 2019
According to Digital Foundry, one running theory for why this happens has to do with Fortniteâs use of Unreal Engine 4 and how it links gunfire to frame output. In effect, the two are synced together, and so when someone with a lower frame rate is using a high rate of fire gun, the number of bullets is lessened because there are fewer frames to trigger them. Itâs a problem players have also noticed in PlayerUnknownâs Battlegrounds, another game that was built in Unreal Engine 4.
When asked about the problem, a spokesperson for Epic Games told Kotaku in an email, âWeâre aware and are working on a fix,â but declined to go into any more detail.
While the slight disadvantage is unlikely to make or break things for most players in most matches, it does create an imbalance when those on Switch, where Fortnite runs at 30fps, go up against people playing on PS4 and Xbox One, where the game runs at 60fps. While the game currently sortsplayers using a keyboard and mouse on console and matchmakes accordingly, thereâs currently nothing similar in place to account for differences in frame rate.
At least until Epic solve the problem, Fortnite players on Switch and low-end PCs will have one more excuse they can use the next time they get outgunned.