Genshin Impact is massive. Even years after its release, it remains one of the most beautiful and content-rich games on mobile. But that beauty comes with a price: it demands a lot of power from your phone.
If you are playing on a budget Android device, you know the struggle. The game stutters during combat, your phone heats up like a toaster, and textures take forever to load.
The good news is that you don’t need the latest flagship phone to enjoy the game. By tweaking the right settings for mobile phone graphics, you can get smooth performance without making the game look terrible. Here is how to configure your graphics for the best experience in 2026.
Why Your Graphics Settings Matter in Genshin Impact
Before we change anything, it helps to know what is actually slowing down your phone. Genshin Impact tries to render a huge open world with complex lighting and character models.
When your settings are too high, your phone’s processor works overtime. This causes heat. When a phone gets too hot, it intentionally slows down to protect itself (this is called thermal throttling). That is usually when you feel the lag spikes.
Our goal is simple: reduce the workload on your processor just enough to keep the frame rate stable and the temperature cool.

Best Genshin Impact Settings for No Lag on Android (2026)
Open your Paimon menu, go to Settings, and select Graphics. Change the “Graphics Quality” to Custom and use these specific adjustments.
1. Render Resolution: Low or Medium
This is the most important setting. It determines how sharp the game looks.
- Recommendation: Start with Medium. If you still lag, drop it to Low.
- Reason: High resolution eats up the most processing power. Lowering this makes the game slightly blurrier, but it gives you the biggest boost in speed.
2. Shadow Quality: Lowest
Shadows are surprisingly heavy on performance.
- Recommendation: Lowest.
- Reason: You won’t notice the lack of detailed shadows when you are fighting a boss. Turning this down frees up a lot of resources.
3. Visual Effects and SFX Quality: Low
- Recommendation: Low.
- Reason: This controls how flashy the explosions and elemental skills look. “Low” still looks good enough to see what is happening, but it stops the game from freezing when you unleash an Elemental Burst.
FPS (Frames Per Second): 30 vs. 60
This is the big debate. 60 FPS feels smoother, but 30 FPS is more stable.
- Recommendation: Set it to 30 FPS.
- Reason: On a budget phone, trying to force 60 FPS usually leads to overheating and jagged performance. A stable 30 FPS is much better than a 60 FPS that constantly drops to 15.
Motion Blur: Off
- Recommendation: Off.
- Reason: Most competitive gamers turn this off anyway. It makes the camera movement cleaner and saves a tiny bit of processing power.
Bloom and Crowd Density
- Recommendation: Turn Bloom Off and set Crowd Density to Low.
- Reason: These are extra visual treats that you don’t need for gameplay.
Advanced Tweaks for Best Graphic Settings & Speed For Genshin Impact
If you have changed the settings above and still face issues, try these external tricks.
1. Use “Game Mode”
Most Android brands (Samsung, Xiaomi, Realme) now have a built-in “Game Booster” or “Game Mode.” Make sure you add Genshin Impact to this launcher. Set the mode to “Performance” or “Max FPS.” This tells your phone to prioritize the game over background apps.
2. Clear Background Apps
Before you launch the game, close everything else. Social media apps, browsers, and music players use up RAM. Genshin needs all the RAM it can get.
3. Don’t Play While Charging
Heat is the enemy of performance. Charging your phone creates heat. Playing a heavy game creates heat. Doing both at the same time is a recipe for extreme lag. Charge your phone first, unplug it, and then play.
Conclusion
Graphics are nice, but gameplay is king. It is much better to have a smooth combat experience with slightly blurry textures than a crisp image that freezes every five seconds.
By using these settings, you can explore the latest regions and defeat the toughest bosses without fighting your phone’s hardware. Experiment with the render resolution to find the sweet spot for your specific device.

