Msi Afterburner — Without Rivatuner
But what happens if you separate them? Can MSI Afterburner stand alone? One curious builder named Alex decided to find out. Alex had just built a compact living-room gaming PC. Every megabyte of storage mattered, and every background process counted toward keeping input lag low. RTSS, while lightweight, added extra services and an overlay driver that Alex felt was overkill for casual couch gaming. He wanted only the core: GPU overclocking, fan curve control, and basic logging.
– Without RTSS, the "On-Screen Display" tab in Afterburner’s settings vanished entirely. There was no way to show FPS, temps, or clock speeds overlaid on his games. He tried third-party overlays like the Xbox Game Bar, but none offered the granular telemetry Afterburner + RTSS provides. msi afterburner without rivatuner
Moreover, the "unofficial overclocking mode" that unlocks extended voltage ranges on Nvidia cards required RTSS’s companion service to enforce stability. Without it, Afterburner would still apply the overclock, but without the safety net that RTSS provided in case of a driver crash. After a week of testing, Alex concluded: MSI Afterburner without RivaTuner works, but it’s like a race car with no dashboard. But what happens if you separate them
– RTSS’s famous framerate limiter was gone. Afterburner alone cannot cap FPS globally or per-application. Alex had to rely on in-game vsync or NVIDIA’s Control Panel frame limiter, which added more input lag than RTSS’s high-precision limiter. Alex had just built a compact living-room gaming PC
– Afterburner’s built-in video capture (using the Predator engine) actually worked without RTSS for basic recording, but Alex noticed that benchmark hotkeys (like F9 for a screenshot or benchmark run) were less responsive. The OSD-less mode also meant no benchmark statistics overlayed on recordings.
Alex eventually reinstalled RTSS, but with a twist: he used the "standalone" RTSS package from Guru3D and configured Afterburner to use it without the extra skins or video capture. He disabled the RTSS welcome splash screen and set the overlay to show only FPS and GPU temp—a lean, mean compromise.
The installation completed. He launched Afterburner, and everything looked normal. The familiar black-and-red interface appeared. His GPU temperature, core clock, memory clock, and voltage all showed up in the main window. He could still move the sliders for core voltage, power limit, and fan speed.