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EDIT: Thanks to u/tng_qQ , -threads 9 gives even better performance than -threads 8.

CS2 only uses 7 cores when set to -threads 8. Using -threads 9 correctly utilizes 8 cores.

I have for a few days experimented with CS2 stuttering & frametime by completely disabling E-cores & efficiency mode via Process Lasso, and forcing CS2 to use 8 threads. The results are clear; using -threads X in launch options increases 1% lows by 20-25%, reduces stuttering and also increases average/peak fps.

Disabling E-cores completely also increased my 1% lows, but made stuttering A LOT more frequent. My guess is that it does the same thing as -threads 8 for CS2, but since other applications can't use the E-cores either, stuttering occurs in-game.

All benchmarks are in 1920x1080 on the highest settings.I made sure to keep the tests consistent. After doing one test recording with/without E-cores/threads and so forth, I restarted my PC completely to make sure the results wouldn't differ due to shaders compiling or anything like that. I also made sure to never alt-tab before (or during) any test. The results are consistently pointing towards -threads 8 favor.

In normal DM (Dust 2, Valve Official servers), 1% lows went from 202.9 up to 229.4 using -threads 8. Average FPS also increased from 405.2 to 490.1. Bottom screenshot shows frametime decreased by a bit with -threads 8, also frametime spikes are not as high and not as frequent.

Results weren't as obvious in these tests since no players or bots were on the server, but the results still showed using -threads 8 was better. 1% lows went from 337.1 up to 352.7. Average FPS also increased from 615.5 to 653.Frametime also increased with less stuttering.

Find out how many physical cores (or performance cores for Intel 12th gen and up) your CPU has.

Take that number and add 1. For example, an i7-9700K has 8 cores, so the number you should put is 9. Put -threads 9 in your launch options for CS2.

= free, easy boosted performance & less stutters

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While I understand this is nice to have an option to easily switch between multiple threads across multiple channels, for someone who likes to message someone in the main panel and continue to observe or separately reply to a threaded conversation - this change has created a workflow issue for me.

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Some communities on the social news site Reddit (known as "subreddits") are devoted to explicit, violent, or hateful material, and have been the topic of controversy. Controversial Reddit communities sometimes receive significant media coverage.

When Reddit was founded in 2005, there was only one shared space for all links, and subreddits did not exist. Subreddits were created later, but could only initially be created by Reddit administrators. In 2008, subreddit creation was opened to all users.[1]

In 2012, the subreddit r/Creepshots received major backlash due to being a subreddit for sharing suggestive or revealing photos of women taken without their awareness or consent. Adrian Chen wrote a Gawker expos of one of the subreddit's moderators and identified the person behind the account, starting discussion in the media about the ethics of anonymity and outing on the Internet.[3]

In 2015, Reddit introduced a quarantine policy to make visiting certain subreddits more difficult. Visiting or joining a quarantined subreddit requires bypassing a warning prompt.[4] In addition, quarantined subreddits do not appear in non-subscription based (aggregate) feeds such as r/all in order to prevent accidental viewing,[5] do not generate revenue, and their user count is not visible. Since 2018, subreddits are allowed to appeal their quarantine.[6]

Some subreddits are dedicated to discussion of illegal or unapproved drugs including meth,[12] opioids,[13][14][15] novel psychoactive substances,[16][17] performance-enhancing drugs such as anabolic steroids and SARMs,[18] and 2,4-Dinitrophenol, a weight loss drug declared unfit for human use by the FDA in 1938 due to causing overdose deaths and cataracts.[19] However, drugs-related subreddits have also enabled research and could provide information that would be difficult or impossible to obtain otherwise.[16][19] Reddit also contains subreddits dedicated to addiction recovery.[20]

On June 9, 2014, a subreddit called r/beatingwomen was closed by Reddit. The community, which featured graphic depictions of violence against women, was banned after its moderators were found to be sharing users' personal information online, and collaborating to protect one another from sitewide bans. Following the ban, the community's founder rebooted the subreddit under the name r/beatingwomen2 in an attempt to circumvent the ban, but was banned afterwards.[21][22]

r/Braincels was the most popular subreddit for incels, or "involuntary celibates", after r/Incels (see below) was banned, gaining 16,900 followers by April 2018. The subreddit promoted rape and suicide.[23] The subreddit was banned in 2019, after violating Reddit's content policy with respect to bullying and harassment.[24][25][26]

r/ChapoTrapHouse was a subreddit dedicated to the leftist podcast Chapo Trap House which is associated with the term dirtbag left.[27][28] The community had 160,000 regulars before being banned on June 29, 2020, because they "consistently host rule-breaking content and their mods have demonstrated no intention of reining in their community."[29] Previously, the community had been quarantined for content that promotes violence.[28] The community of the subreddit later migrated to an instance of Lemmy, a Reddit alternative.[30]

The term "Chimpire" refers to a collection of subreddits and affiliated websites that promoted anti-black racism, including frequent use of racial slurs. In June 2013, the subreddit r/niggers was banned from Reddit for engaging in vote manipulation, incitements of violence, and using racist content to disrupt other communities. Reddit general manager Erik Martin noted that the subforum was given multiple chances to comply with site rules, noting that "users can tell from the amount of warnings we extended to a subreddit as clearly awful as r/niggers that we go into the decision to ban subreddits with a lot of scrutiny".[31] Following the ban of r/niggers, the subreddit r/Coontown grew to become the most popular "Chimpire" site, with over 15,000 members at its peak.[32] Many of the posters on these subreddits were formerly involved with r/niggers.[33][34][35]

One of these subreddits, r/shitniggerssay, was banned in June 2015 at the same time as r/fatpeoplehate.[36] In the midst of changes to Reddit's content policy, r/Coontown was banned in August 2015.[37]

r/Chodi, whose name is derived from a crude Hindi sexual slang term, was a right-wing Indian subreddit that claimed to be a "free speech sub for memes, jokes, satire, sarcasm and fun". The sub, which had over 90,000 subscribers as of January 2022, frequently propagated Islamophobic, anti-Christian, homophobic, and misogynistic content, with open calls for genocide against Muslims. Time reports that users used intentional misspellings and slang to circumvent Reddit's anti-hate speech software.[38][39] The Quint cited the subreddit's popularity as an example of how Reddit is used as a haven for hate speech in India.[40] It was banned on March 23, 2022, for promoting hate, causing its users to move to Telegram.[41]

r/ChongLangTV, whose name is derived from the Great Wave off Kanagawa, was a Chinese-language subreddit that espoused extreme anti-Chinese sentiment. The sub, which had over 53,000 subscribers as of March 2022, was banned on March 2, 2022, for "exposing privacy of others." A participant of the subreddit told Radio Free Asia that the Reddit ban was due to Chinese long-arm internet censorship.[42] Following the ban, the community's founder rebooted the subreddit under the name r/CLTV in an attempt to circumvent the ban, but was banned afterwards. 006ab0faaa

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