The gaming community is still looking into just how effective Game Mode is at its job, but it is safe to say that any feature that allows for a computer to dedicate as many resources as possible to a game regardless of whatever other programs are running in the background is a feature that all gamers would want to use. Once you upgrade your computer to the Windows 10 Creators Update – whether manually or when the update is rolled out to your machine, you will have Game Mode on your computer. Enabling Game Mode so it can do what it has been designed by Microsoft to do, on the other hand, is a different story. Right now, Windows 10 users who want Game Mode enabled are going to have to enable the feature separately for each individual game that they want it to work its magic with. However, there is also a universal toggle for enabling/disabling Game Mode in the Windows 10 Creators Update’s Settings that, according to Microsoft, automatically enables Game Mode when white-listed games are launched, but the list of those games is pretty short at the moment. To enable Game Mode at the system level across the Windows 10 Creators Update, you need to: When you launch a game and want Game Mode to be working while you’re playing that game, you are going to have to enable the feature for that specific game, and do so for every single game that you want Game Mode to be working with. In order to do so, you need to:
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