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"Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling" option not showing. How do I get it to show?

Tio Juan 20 Reputation points
2025-12-28T23:45:59.9566667+00:00

I have an

  1. H610M S2H DDR4 Gigabyte mother board, with a
  2. 12th gen Intel Core i5-12400T, with
  3. Intel UHD 730 onboard graphics, running
  4. Windows 11 Home 25H2.

But there are certain games that say hardware acceleration is not turned on and don't look as good. I've tried the same games on another computer with a 13th gen Core i3 and they play and look just fine with hardware acceleration.

I went to

  • System Display Settings, then
  • Graphics Settings. and look for
  • Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling

But the option isn't there on the computer in question. On the other computer I tried out it has this option.

I tried updating the drivers but it says they're up-to-date.

Is this a driver problem or does my onboard graphics not support hardware acceleration?

Windows for home | Windows 11 | Display and graphics
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2 answers

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  1. Ivan B 111.7K Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2025-12-29T02:50:17.46+00:00

    Hi,

    Unfortunately, your processor doesn't natively support HAGS. This varies depending on the GPU; if it's Intel, only the Iris and Arc series have HAGS; if it's AMD, it would be Vega and RDNA; and if I'm not mistaken, Nvidia starts with the Pascal 10 series.

    Give feedback if the information was useful or not.

    Thanks

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  2. AI answer

    2025-12-28T23:46:08.0733333+00:00

    The absence of the "Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling" option on your system could be due to a few factors:

    1. Driver Support: Ensure that your graphics drivers are not only up-to-date but also specifically support hardware acceleration features. Sometimes, even if the drivers are the latest, they may not support all features for integrated graphics.
    2. Windows Version: Make sure that your Windows 11 is fully updated. Sometimes, certain features are enabled or improved in subsequent updates.
    3. Graphics Hardware: Integrated graphics, such as the Intel UHD 730, may have limitations compared to dedicated GPUs. It's possible that the onboard graphics do not support hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling, which is more commonly supported by newer dedicated graphics cards.
    4. BIOS Settings: Check your BIOS settings to ensure that any related options for graphics or hardware acceleration are enabled.

    If after checking these factors the option still does not appear, it may be that your specific hardware configuration does not support this feature, unlike the 13th gen Core i3 system you mentioned.


    References:

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