M1 iPad Pro – Genshin Impact at MAX SETTINGS + 60 FPS! (and thermal tested)



Some people have asked me if the 2021 M1 iPad Pro can play Genshin Impact at max settings and 60 fps. The answer is – yes it can! Even after 30 minutes of consistent gameplay, the iPad did not thermal throttle or overheat and the experience was smooth, enjoyable, and easy.

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00:00 Introduction
01:15 Graphics Settings
02:18 Gameplay
03:32 30 Minutes Of Gameplay Results
04:12 Thermals After 30 Minutes
06:07 Findings and Thoughts

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#m1ipad #ipadpro #genshinimpact

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36 thoughts on “M1 iPad Pro – Genshin Impact at MAX SETTINGS + 60 FPS! (and thermal tested)”

  1. I'd like to think there is a noticeable difference between 30 and 60 FPS. You could try switching between screen recording the gameplay at 60 and then cutting back to the camera when off the gameplay. Otherwise, keep up the quality content. This is only a suggestion.

    Reply
  2. Just a passing comment that it’s surprising that the hottest area is around the centre of the iPad Pro …… isn’t the logic board (ie the “motherboard” should be around the edges and the rest of the place should housed the battery ?

    Hope Ifixit or Jig will do a tear down and show the innards of the iPad Pro, both the 12.9” and the 11”

    Good work pal, keep it up

    Reply
  3. They removed Paimon struggling with the word "phenomenon" and made her say "occurrence". ☹️
    I've been watching your videos for a few days now and I'm now subscribed to this channel. Please, let us see your cat from time to time. I loved seeing you doing your thing whilst the cat was there on the table. It gives the video a cosy vibe I think. 😌

    Can it run Crysis? Just joking. I'm not interested in getting a new iPad but I'd like to see how this iPad works with multitasking. A good example would be writing a scientific paper (not sure about the exact translation, we call it "Hausarbeit" here in Germany).

    Reply
  4. Something interesting could be that you measure temperature before starting to play, after 10 mins of screen on and doing nothing, for example. As a calibration for a better analysis.

    Reply
  5. Going forward M series of iPad Pros ought to just be tested with Pro apps and AAA games.

    Testing these devices with mobile games and $5/5mb/5 minute apps is low hanging fruit and not real tests.

    Reply
  6. Test the AAA game Divinity 2.
    As a console/pc game it is far more demanding and devs had to get around the restrictive memory limitations of 2.7- 4 GB Ram on iPad Pros.

    Reply
  7. Guys. I have one. He's trying to be nice. It's a hot device. On my first day I played pubg and it got HOT. That chip is working overtime in there. Gives you amazing performance but careful you don't get burnt.
    Disclaimer: was my first day with it. So we'll see.

    Reply
  8. 1:55 did you know, that the majority of devices accessing YouTube isn't able to display 24 or 25 fps properly?
    Most devices are running on 60 hz displays which doesn't fit into 25 fps as a whole. Because of that, YouTube will "upscale" your 25 fps video to 30 fps anyway and include 5 doubled frames every second to make it fit into the timing of 60 hz. That causes jitter when panning or filming a steady motion.
    Flying with a drone set to 24/25 fps also shows a lot of jitter you may have come across.

    Reply

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