+++ title = "Fixing 4:3 Resolution in CS2 on Linux with NVIDIA GPU" date = 2024-10-17 description = "How I fixed the 4:3 resolution in CS2 with an NVIDIA graphics card and Linux" +++ I don't consider myself a gamer, but I've been playing the Counter-Strike series since CS 1.6. Every now and then, I enjoy staying up all night playing this broken game. Ever since I started playing Counter-Strike, I’ve preferred using a 4:3 stretched resolution on my 16:9 monitor. When I switched to Linux as my daily driver, the only game I really cared about was CS:GO. CS:GO ran perfectly without any tweaks on my [Void Linux](https://voidlinux.org) system with a 1050ti laptop graphics card. I could play with the stretched resolution, and I even got more FPS than I did on Windows. My problems started with the release of CS2. The 4:3 resolution didn’t work at all, some resolutions were missing, and there didn’t seem to be a solution (except for some Wayland fixes). There’s a [GitHub issue](https://github.com/ValveSoftware/csgo-osx-linux/issues/3264) about it. My first idea was to set a custom resolution through `xrandr`. I followed [guides like this one](https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/227876/how-to-set-custom-resolution-using-xrandr-when-the-resolution-is-not-available-i), but that didn’t work for me. For a while, I just stuck with the standard 16:9 `1920x1080` resolution. But today, I opened the `nvidia-settings` GUI. After tinkering with some advanced settings in the resolution section, I think I finally fixed my issue. In the `X Server Display Configuration` section under advanced options, I adjusted the ViewPortIn and Panning settings. I’m currently using a `2560x1440` resolution, so for 4:3 stretched, I set the resolution to `1440x1080`. Here are the settings that worked for me: - **ViewPortIn**: `1440x1080` - **ViewPortOut**: `2560x1440+0+0` - **Panning**: `1440x1080` That fixed the issue, but I didn’t want to manually open `nvidia-settings` every time I wanted to play CS2. After reading the [Arch Wiki article](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NVIDIA#Using_nvidia-settings) on `nvidia-settings`, I found that I could use this command to get the current resolution information: ```sh $ nvidia-settings -q CurrentMetaMode ``` So ~I wrote~ ChatGPT wrote a small bash script to switch between my regular resolution and the CS2 resolution. ```bash #!/bin/bash # Define the commands for the two modes MODE1="nvidia-settings --assign 'CurrentMetaMode=DPY-4: 2560x1440_144 @2560x1440 +1920+0 {ViewPortIn=2560x1440, ViewPortOut=2560x1440+0+0}, DPY-3: nvidia-auto-select @1920x1080 +0+180 {ViewPortIn=1920x1080, ViewPortOut=1920x1080+0+0}'" MODE2="nvidia-settings --assign 'CurrentMetaMode=DPY-4: 2560x1440_144 @1440x1080 +0+0 {ViewPortIn=1440x1080, ViewPortOut=2560x1440+0+0}'" # File to store the current mode STATE_FILE="/tmp/current_resolution_mode" # Check if the state file exists if [[ ! -f "$STATE_FILE" ]]; then # If the state file doesn't exist, create it and set it to mode 1 echo "1" > "$STATE_FILE" CURRENT_MODE=1 else # Read the current mode from the state file CURRENT_MODE=$(cat "$STATE_FILE") fi # Switch between the two modes if [[ "$CURRENT_MODE" -eq 1 ]]; then # Switch to mode 2 eval "$MODE2" echo "2" > "$STATE_FILE" echo "Switched to resolution mode 2" else # Switch to mode 1 eval "$MODE1" echo "1" > "$STATE_FILE" echo "Switched to resolution mode 1" fi ```