The first time you encounter a new object or effect, Ryujinx compiles the shader. You will likely notice a brief stutter. Storage: Once compiled, the shader is saved to your disk.
The is a collection of these pre-compiled programs stored on your disk. Instead of recompiling a shader every time you enter a new area or see an explosion, the emulator simply pulls the "solved" version from the cache, preventing the CPU spikes that cause "shader stutter". How Shader Caching Works in Ryujinx ryujinx shader caches
Proper management can resolve many graphical issues, such as invisible textures or frequent crashes. The first time you encounter a new object
Stuttering occurs because shader compilation is . When a game requests a shader that isn't in your cache, the CPU must stop what it’s doing to compile it immediately. This pause manifests as a frame drop or a temporary freeze. As you play more and your cache grows, these stutters will naturally decrease because most shaders are already stored. Managing and Troubleshooting Shaders The is a collection of these pre-compiled programs
If you update your GPU drivers or Ryujinx releases a significant engine update, the cache may need to be rebuilt to maintain compatibility. Why You Experience Stuttering
Shaders are small programs that run on your GPU to handle graphical tasks like lighting, terrain rendering, and visual effects. Because the Nintendo Switch uses a different architecture than a standard PC, Ryujinx must translate these shaders during gameplay.
The next time you launch the game, Ryujinx pre-loads these shaders into your RAM.