MECHA: Break is an action-packed, mech-filled game with stunning graphics and crazy combat. But sometimes those graphics don’t play nicely. Stuttering, texture issues, or crashing outright are just a few of the things that can destroy the fun. If you’ve ever found yourself yelling at your screen because your mech is a blurry potato or your FPS crashes while you’re in a firefight, you’re not the only one.
This guide leads you through every step to use PC graphics repair for common MECHA issues: Break glitches. Don’t freak out—it’s not for tech enthusiasts; it’s for regular players.
Knowing the Problem

As a matter of course, let’s tackle the most common graphics problems faced by players in MECHA: Break. These include low frame rates, texture pop-in or missing textures, visual glitches (e.g., screen tearing or flickering), and spontaneous crashes during gameplay or loading. There are also a few players who face a black screen when they start the game or immediately after cinematic cuts.
All these issues are essentially caused by either hardware constraint, out-of-date drivers, or improperly configured settings.
Step 1: Update Your GPU Drivers
The first and most crucial thing you do regardless of the game you’re playing is update your graphics drivers. Both NVIDIA and AMD release regular updates that are precisely made to boost performance in new games, and MECHA: Break is no exception.
Visit the official NVIDIA or AMD website, or launch their corresponding software (GeForce Experience or AMD Adrenalin) to find and install up-to-date drivers. One simple step by itself in this manner is amazingly effective at fixing so many issues.
Step 2: Make Sure Your System Is Able
Even the best-tuned game won’t play on a toaster. MECHA: Break needs a mid-tier system to deliver its graphical punch. Official system requirements will, of course, vary based on your build and resolution, but you’ll usually need a mid-tier GPU (e.g., an NVIDIA GTX 1060 or AMD RX 580), 8 GB or better of RAM, and a pretty current CPU.
If you’re just managing on minimum specs, play at lower settings. The game also runs faster on an SSD, with better loading times and no pop-in textures.
Step 3: Update In-Game Graphics Settings
Once you’re sure your hardware is up to it, it’s time to mess around with your settings. You should open your game’s Video or Graphics settings and begin fiddling. If you’re having trouble with performance, lower your resolution scale a bit and drop shadow quality. Textures can usually be left on high if your GPU is VRAM-dense.
For silky smooth gameplay, enable V-Sync to eliminate screen tearing and enable DLSS (if you have NVIDIA graphics) or FSR (if you have AMD graphics) if they are supported. The modes render the resolution upscale with no loss of high performance. Experiment with other modes of anti-aliasing if you suffer from a lot of stuttering—TAA will give better graphics but could be less effective than FXAA.
Step 4: Kill Background Apps and Overlays

One of the biggest stealth performance killers is unnecessary background activity. If you’re running MECHA: Break alongside Discord, Chrome, OBS, RGB software, and game launchers all at once, you’re basically setting yourself up for stutter city.
Utilize Task Manager (Ctrl + Shift + Esc) to close any applications that are using CPU, GPU, or RAM. Turn off any overlays—i.e., Steam, Discord, or NVIDIA’s in-game overlay—that interfere with performance and, in some cases, cause graphical glitches.
Step 5: Utilize GPU Control Panel Tweaks
In some cases, you can wheedled out a little extra performance (or repair some graphical bugs) by tinkering with settings right in your GPU control panel.
For users of NVIDIA, open the NVIDIA Control Panel and set the Power Management Mode to “Prefer maximum performance.” For further tweaking, you can even enable or disable “Low Latency Mode” and “Threaded Optimization” if needed. AMD users will have to go to Radeon Software and adjust texture filtering and anti-lag settings for similar performance tweaking.
Step 6: Change to Exclusive Fullscreen
This is just plain good advice: make sure you are in Exclusive Fullscreen mode. Windowed or Borderless Fullscreen will cause input lag, V-Sync problems, and frame pacing imbalance in certain setups. Switching to true fullscreen will typically give you a less jerky experience, especially if you’re running a multi-monitor setup.
Step 7: Reinstall the Game (If Necessary)
If all else fails—if you’ve updated drivers, tweaked settings, disabled overlays, and the game is still breaking—it might be time for a clean reinstall. Before doing that, uninstall the game and manually delete any leftover folders in your AppData or Documents directory related to MECHA: Break. This ensures you’re starting with a fresh install that isn’t carrying over any corrupted configs.