Windows 10 Font blurry 125% scaling











up vote
23
down vote

favorite
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It's kind of hard to read sometimes so I have scaling set to 125% on 1920x1080 resolution. ClearType doesn't fix this I tried turning it on and off. Everything looks great and fine (Explorer, Firefox...), except some things. See here:





Link to full-sized image



Same issue in Computer Management for example. However in 100% scaling it looks like there's no issues.










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
    – John Smith
    Jul 30 '15 at 8:31










  • Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
    – MonkeyZeus
    Jul 30 '15 at 14:08










  • Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
    – steve
    Jul 30 '15 at 19:31










  • I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:39










  • I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:40















up vote
23
down vote

favorite
9












It's kind of hard to read sometimes so I have scaling set to 125% on 1920x1080 resolution. ClearType doesn't fix this I tried turning it on and off. Everything looks great and fine (Explorer, Firefox...), except some things. See here:





Link to full-sized image



Same issue in Computer Management for example. However in 100% scaling it looks like there's no issues.










share|improve this question




















  • 3




    Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
    – John Smith
    Jul 30 '15 at 8:31










  • Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
    – MonkeyZeus
    Jul 30 '15 at 14:08










  • Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
    – steve
    Jul 30 '15 at 19:31










  • I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:39










  • I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:40













up vote
23
down vote

favorite
9









up vote
23
down vote

favorite
9






9





It's kind of hard to read sometimes so I have scaling set to 125% on 1920x1080 resolution. ClearType doesn't fix this I tried turning it on and off. Everything looks great and fine (Explorer, Firefox...), except some things. See here:





Link to full-sized image



Same issue in Computer Management for example. However in 100% scaling it looks like there's no issues.










share|improve this question















It's kind of hard to read sometimes so I have scaling set to 125% on 1920x1080 resolution. ClearType doesn't fix this I tried turning it on and off. Everything looks great and fine (Explorer, Firefox...), except some things. See here:





Link to full-sized image



Same issue in Computer Management for example. However in 100% scaling it looks like there's no issues.







fonts resolution dpi windows-10






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 30 '15 at 8:30









a CVn

24.2k873119




24.2k873119










asked Jul 30 '15 at 8:23









John Smith

171226




171226








  • 3




    Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
    – John Smith
    Jul 30 '15 at 8:31










  • Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
    – MonkeyZeus
    Jul 30 '15 at 14:08










  • Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
    – steve
    Jul 30 '15 at 19:31










  • I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:39










  • I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:40














  • 3




    Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
    – John Smith
    Jul 30 '15 at 8:31










  • Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
    – MonkeyZeus
    Jul 30 '15 at 14:08










  • Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
    – steve
    Jul 30 '15 at 19:31










  • I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:39










  • I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
    – smwikipedia
    Feb 1 '17 at 14:40








3




3




Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
– John Smith
Jul 30 '15 at 8:31




Just to add: I upgraded from Windows 8.1 where this was NOT an issue.
– John Smith
Jul 30 '15 at 8:31












Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
– MonkeyZeus
Jul 30 '15 at 14:08




Can you try 150%? Maybe there is a glitch which is specific to 125%
– MonkeyZeus
Jul 30 '15 at 14:08












Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
– steve
Jul 30 '15 at 19:31




Make sure you have the latest Windows 10 certified display driver
– steve
Jul 30 '15 at 19:31












I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
– smwikipedia
Feb 1 '17 at 14:39




I have the same issue. Please try this tool (windows10_dpi_blurry_fix.xpexplorer.com). It fixes all the blurry issue with 125% DPI on Windows 10.
– smwikipedia
Feb 1 '17 at 14:39












I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
– smwikipedia
Feb 1 '17 at 14:40




I really don't know why this question is protected. It looks more like a PR conspiracy than some spam attack.
– smwikipedia
Feb 1 '17 at 14:40










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
13
down vote













I had this problem too but was able to fix it with the specific programs that has the issue (like Steam and Rainmeter). You'll need to do the following:




  1. Note down which specific programs have the font problem.

  2. Right-click on the program icon (not the shortcut) and choose properties.

  3. Click the "Compatibility" tab.

  4. Check the box labeled "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings".

  5. Restart the program.

  6. Repeat for each affected program.






share|improve this answer



















  • 5




    That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
    – John Smith
    Jul 30 '15 at 21:34












  • I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
    – codepleb
    Aug 20 '15 at 18:54








  • 1




    I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
    – SharpC
    Sep 18 '15 at 14:27




















up vote
3
down vote













I've managed to get sharp fonts in CMD, Device Manager, etc at once using standard Windows settings UI (i.e., without changing the compatibility settings or using the auto-start registry script).



Basically, you need to go to the Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display and set a custom scaling level to 125%.



The nuance is that the UI won't let you to apply the setting if you already have the recommended 125% setting in the Settings > Display. But there are at least two workarounds:



Workaround 1: You can just set the scaling level to some other value in the Settings > Display UI, just before changing the settings back to 125% in the custom scaling level UI.



Workaround 2: You can set the custom scaling level to some other value in the custom scaling level UI, Apply, choose to re-logon later in the popped dialog, then set the custom scaling level back to 125%, Apply, and re-logon manually.



I've tested both workarounds and they both worked on two of my laptops.






share|improve this answer























  • This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
    – Deqing
    Nov 16 '17 at 1:35










  • This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
    – Sнаđошƒаӽ
    Oct 26 at 19:46


















up vote
1
down vote













This is a window10 scaling method problem. There is a step by step manual on Lifehacker using a tool that allows you to switch to win8.1 scaling method. This worked fine for me.



Lifehacker Hot To Fix Blurry Fonts






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Here is how I solved it the simplest way. Simply set whatever DPI Windows is recommending as a custom DPI. That is, if Windows is recommending 125%, set a custom DPI of 125% and log out and log back in. This works fantastically, at least in the windows 10 build I am using now (Update 1803, Version 10.0.16299.15)



    Edit: Also found it to be working great on Update 1809, Version 10.0.17763.134






    share|improve this answer






















      protected by Community Aug 2 '15 at 19:58



      Thank you for your interest in this question.
      Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



      Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      13
      down vote













      I had this problem too but was able to fix it with the specific programs that has the issue (like Steam and Rainmeter). You'll need to do the following:




      1. Note down which specific programs have the font problem.

      2. Right-click on the program icon (not the shortcut) and choose properties.

      3. Click the "Compatibility" tab.

      4. Check the box labeled "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings".

      5. Restart the program.

      6. Repeat for each affected program.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 5




        That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
        – John Smith
        Jul 30 '15 at 21:34












      • I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
        – codepleb
        Aug 20 '15 at 18:54








      • 1




        I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
        – SharpC
        Sep 18 '15 at 14:27

















      up vote
      13
      down vote













      I had this problem too but was able to fix it with the specific programs that has the issue (like Steam and Rainmeter). You'll need to do the following:




      1. Note down which specific programs have the font problem.

      2. Right-click on the program icon (not the shortcut) and choose properties.

      3. Click the "Compatibility" tab.

      4. Check the box labeled "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings".

      5. Restart the program.

      6. Repeat for each affected program.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 5




        That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
        – John Smith
        Jul 30 '15 at 21:34












      • I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
        – codepleb
        Aug 20 '15 at 18:54








      • 1




        I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
        – SharpC
        Sep 18 '15 at 14:27















      up vote
      13
      down vote










      up vote
      13
      down vote









      I had this problem too but was able to fix it with the specific programs that has the issue (like Steam and Rainmeter). You'll need to do the following:




      1. Note down which specific programs have the font problem.

      2. Right-click on the program icon (not the shortcut) and choose properties.

      3. Click the "Compatibility" tab.

      4. Check the box labeled "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings".

      5. Restart the program.

      6. Repeat for each affected program.






      share|improve this answer














      I had this problem too but was able to fix it with the specific programs that has the issue (like Steam and Rainmeter). You'll need to do the following:




      1. Note down which specific programs have the font problem.

      2. Right-click on the program icon (not the shortcut) and choose properties.

      3. Click the "Compatibility" tab.

      4. Check the box labeled "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings".

      5. Restart the program.

      6. Repeat for each affected program.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Jul 30 '15 at 17:21









      Moshe Katz

      2,16221432




      2,16221432










      answered Jul 30 '15 at 14:45









      Richard

      1312




      1312








      • 5




        That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
        – John Smith
        Jul 30 '15 at 21:34












      • I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
        – codepleb
        Aug 20 '15 at 18:54








      • 1




        I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
        – SharpC
        Sep 18 '15 at 14:27
















      • 5




        That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
        – John Smith
        Jul 30 '15 at 21:34












      • I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
        – codepleb
        Aug 20 '15 at 18:54








      • 1




        I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
        – SharpC
        Sep 18 '15 at 14:27










      5




      5




      That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
      – John Smith
      Jul 30 '15 at 21:34






      That's all nice and good, but how do you do it for things like: powershell, wscript, and pretty much all items in C:UsersuserAppDataLocalMicrosoftWindowsWinX? It seems this is only an issue on some old mmc snap-ins. Just starting mmc looks blurry as well. It's like Windows 10 doesn't properly render old tools and there's no way to disable display scaling on high DPI settings for these things I listed and have the issue.
      – John Smith
      Jul 30 '15 at 21:34














      I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
      – codepleb
      Aug 20 '15 at 18:54






      I had the same problem in 8.1 and was able to fix it somehow. I have no idea how and it screws me up that it's back now that I've upgraded to win 10. :( This method works, but I would prefer a solution that grabs this problem at the root.
      – codepleb
      Aug 20 '15 at 18:54






      1




      1




      I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
      – SharpC
      Sep 18 '15 at 14:27






      I had exactly the same problem after installing Clover. Thanks to this fix it's no longer blurry, and thanks to deselecting "Launch folder windows in a separate process" it now seems to be working: reddit.com/r/Windows10/comments/3dmfqf/…
      – SharpC
      Sep 18 '15 at 14:27














      up vote
      3
      down vote













      I've managed to get sharp fonts in CMD, Device Manager, etc at once using standard Windows settings UI (i.e., without changing the compatibility settings or using the auto-start registry script).



      Basically, you need to go to the Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display and set a custom scaling level to 125%.



      The nuance is that the UI won't let you to apply the setting if you already have the recommended 125% setting in the Settings > Display. But there are at least two workarounds:



      Workaround 1: You can just set the scaling level to some other value in the Settings > Display UI, just before changing the settings back to 125% in the custom scaling level UI.



      Workaround 2: You can set the custom scaling level to some other value in the custom scaling level UI, Apply, choose to re-logon later in the popped dialog, then set the custom scaling level back to 125%, Apply, and re-logon manually.



      I've tested both workarounds and they both worked on two of my laptops.






      share|improve this answer























      • This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
        – Deqing
        Nov 16 '17 at 1:35










      • This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
        – Sнаđошƒаӽ
        Oct 26 at 19:46















      up vote
      3
      down vote













      I've managed to get sharp fonts in CMD, Device Manager, etc at once using standard Windows settings UI (i.e., without changing the compatibility settings or using the auto-start registry script).



      Basically, you need to go to the Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display and set a custom scaling level to 125%.



      The nuance is that the UI won't let you to apply the setting if you already have the recommended 125% setting in the Settings > Display. But there are at least two workarounds:



      Workaround 1: You can just set the scaling level to some other value in the Settings > Display UI, just before changing the settings back to 125% in the custom scaling level UI.



      Workaround 2: You can set the custom scaling level to some other value in the custom scaling level UI, Apply, choose to re-logon later in the popped dialog, then set the custom scaling level back to 125%, Apply, and re-logon manually.



      I've tested both workarounds and they both worked on two of my laptops.






      share|improve this answer























      • This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
        – Deqing
        Nov 16 '17 at 1:35










      • This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
        – Sнаđошƒаӽ
        Oct 26 at 19:46













      up vote
      3
      down vote










      up vote
      3
      down vote









      I've managed to get sharp fonts in CMD, Device Manager, etc at once using standard Windows settings UI (i.e., without changing the compatibility settings or using the auto-start registry script).



      Basically, you need to go to the Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display and set a custom scaling level to 125%.



      The nuance is that the UI won't let you to apply the setting if you already have the recommended 125% setting in the Settings > Display. But there are at least two workarounds:



      Workaround 1: You can just set the scaling level to some other value in the Settings > Display UI, just before changing the settings back to 125% in the custom scaling level UI.



      Workaround 2: You can set the custom scaling level to some other value in the custom scaling level UI, Apply, choose to re-logon later in the popped dialog, then set the custom scaling level back to 125%, Apply, and re-logon manually.



      I've tested both workarounds and they both worked on two of my laptops.






      share|improve this answer














      I've managed to get sharp fonts in CMD, Device Manager, etc at once using standard Windows settings UI (i.e., without changing the compatibility settings or using the auto-start registry script).



      Basically, you need to go to the Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display and set a custom scaling level to 125%.



      The nuance is that the UI won't let you to apply the setting if you already have the recommended 125% setting in the Settings > Display. But there are at least two workarounds:



      Workaround 1: You can just set the scaling level to some other value in the Settings > Display UI, just before changing the settings back to 125% in the custom scaling level UI.



      Workaround 2: You can set the custom scaling level to some other value in the custom scaling level UI, Apply, choose to re-logon later in the popped dialog, then set the custom scaling level back to 125%, Apply, and re-logon manually.



      I've tested both workarounds and they both worked on two of my laptops.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17









      Community

      1




      1










      answered Feb 11 '16 at 14:53









      Alex Che

      1,89421212




      1,89421212












      • This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
        – Deqing
        Nov 16 '17 at 1:35










      • This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
        – Sнаđошƒаӽ
        Oct 26 at 19:46


















      • This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
        – Deqing
        Nov 16 '17 at 1:35










      • This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
        – Sнаđошƒаӽ
        Oct 26 at 19:46
















      This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
      – Deqing
      Nov 16 '17 at 1:35




      This is a good method to get the clear font back, the only problem is when connecting to montior it has to be the same scale as well, which is really annoying.
      – Deqing
      Nov 16 '17 at 1:35












      This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
      – Sнаđошƒаӽ
      Oct 26 at 19:46




      This doesn't work anymore. As soon as you set a custom DPI, Windows doesn't let you change DPI settings (the controls get disabled) unless you log out.
      – Sнаđошƒаӽ
      Oct 26 at 19:46










      up vote
      1
      down vote













      This is a window10 scaling method problem. There is a step by step manual on Lifehacker using a tool that allows you to switch to win8.1 scaling method. This worked fine for me.



      Lifehacker Hot To Fix Blurry Fonts






      share|improve this answer

























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        This is a window10 scaling method problem. There is a step by step manual on Lifehacker using a tool that allows you to switch to win8.1 scaling method. This worked fine for me.



        Lifehacker Hot To Fix Blurry Fonts






        share|improve this answer























          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          This is a window10 scaling method problem. There is a step by step manual on Lifehacker using a tool that allows you to switch to win8.1 scaling method. This worked fine for me.



          Lifehacker Hot To Fix Blurry Fonts






          share|improve this answer












          This is a window10 scaling method problem. There is a step by step manual on Lifehacker using a tool that allows you to switch to win8.1 scaling method. This worked fine for me.



          Lifehacker Hot To Fix Blurry Fonts







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 4 '17 at 16:16









          Hexodus

          1414




          1414






















              up vote
              0
              down vote













              Here is how I solved it the simplest way. Simply set whatever DPI Windows is recommending as a custom DPI. That is, if Windows is recommending 125%, set a custom DPI of 125% and log out and log back in. This works fantastically, at least in the windows 10 build I am using now (Update 1803, Version 10.0.16299.15)



              Edit: Also found it to be working great on Update 1809, Version 10.0.17763.134






              share|improve this answer



























                up vote
                0
                down vote













                Here is how I solved it the simplest way. Simply set whatever DPI Windows is recommending as a custom DPI. That is, if Windows is recommending 125%, set a custom DPI of 125% and log out and log back in. This works fantastically, at least in the windows 10 build I am using now (Update 1803, Version 10.0.16299.15)



                Edit: Also found it to be working great on Update 1809, Version 10.0.17763.134






                share|improve this answer

























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                  Here is how I solved it the simplest way. Simply set whatever DPI Windows is recommending as a custom DPI. That is, if Windows is recommending 125%, set a custom DPI of 125% and log out and log back in. This works fantastically, at least in the windows 10 build I am using now (Update 1803, Version 10.0.16299.15)



                  Edit: Also found it to be working great on Update 1809, Version 10.0.17763.134






                  share|improve this answer














                  Here is how I solved it the simplest way. Simply set whatever DPI Windows is recommending as a custom DPI. That is, if Windows is recommending 125%, set a custom DPI of 125% and log out and log back in. This works fantastically, at least in the windows 10 build I am using now (Update 1803, Version 10.0.16299.15)



                  Edit: Also found it to be working great on Update 1809, Version 10.0.17763.134







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Dec 1 at 6:47

























                  answered Nov 9 at 17:16









                  Sнаđошƒаӽ

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                      protected by Community Aug 2 '15 at 19:58



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