PUBG dev reveals its top priority fixes and there’s a lot of them

PUBG dev reveals its top priority fixes and there’s a lot of them
Mike Harradence Updated on by

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PUBG Corp. has 'fallen short' in touching base on performance-related complaints with chicken dinner-giving title PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, the studio admitted in a 'Dev Letter' to fans.

The developer is now attempting to remedy the situation by unveiling a slew of key improvements for PUBG, with priority given to performance, server-side optimisation, and cheating. 

A few issues have already been identified and are pretty each to patch up, namely GPU overloading caused by vehicles and lighting effects. Other fixes include optimisation for vehicles, loading, and frame rate drops. 

The server side of things will see a reduction in network latency, increasing the speed of data transfers on objects, and ironing out 'inefficient network code.' 

Cheating of course remains a perennial issue for PUBG, and while the studio has made some significant leaps in recent months, it says 'there's more we can do' on the problem. Be sure to follow the above link for the fully skinny on PUBG Corp's plans for the game.

In related news, it's been revealed that the company has filed a lawsuit against Epic Games' Korean branch in regards to similarities between PUBG and Fortnite.

Meanwhile, those of you who are playing the Xbox One version of the battle royale title might want to boot up the game and have a crack at the new Miramar map.