Arknights Endfield Settings to Change First for Better Visibility and Clarity
If you want Arknights: Endfield to be easier to read in combat, the fastest wins are turning off visual noise, pulling the camera back, and keeping render scale high enough for a sharp image. Change these first, then fine‑tune.

1. Turn Off Visual Noise
These options immediately improve clarity during fights.
- Motion Blur: Off – removes smear when you turn or dodge.
- Depth of Field: Off or Low – keeps enemies and hazards in focus instead of blurring the background.
- Screen Shake: Low if you ever feel disoriented or struggle to read telegraphs; Medium at most.
- Volumetric Fog: Off – boosts visibility in busy areas and gives a noticeable FPS gain on PC.
Do these before touching anything else; they’re the biggest clarity upgrades for both strong and weak hardware.
2. Improve Camera View and Control
Next, adjust how much of the battlefield you can see and how the camera behaves.
- Activate Far Camera: On – effectively a wider FOV, letting you see more enemies and AoEs around you.
- Camera Sensitivity (Horizontal/Vertical): start at default and change in small steps so you can track enemies without over‑rotating.
- Combat Camera Correction: Low–Medium – enough auto‑centering to help, but not so much that it fights your input.
This combination gives more information on screen without sacrificing control.
3. Keep the Image Sharp
For readability, avoid going too low on internal resolution.
- Render Scale:
- Anti‑aliasing / Upscaling (PC):
Higher render quality means cleaner enemy silhouettes and clearer telegraphs, which is worth more than ultra shadows or heavy effects.
4. Tame Shadows, Effects, and Clutter
Finally, reduce the settings that add detail without helping you see better.
- Shadow Quality: Low–Medium – keeps character outlines readable without heavy performance cost.
- Special Effects / VFX Quality: Low–Medium – prevents ults and reactions from turning the screen into a blinding particle mess.
- Vegetation / Ambient Detail: Low – less foliage and clutter means enemies and traps stand out more.
Change these after steps 1–3; together they give you a clear, readable Endfield image tuned for gameplay rather than screenshots.


