Vulkanrt-1.1.108.0-installer

After installation, confirm that VulkanRT 1.1.108.0 is properly recognized:

vulkanrt-1.1.108.0-installer is an installer package for the Vulkan Runtime (vulkanrt) that provides the Vulkan 1.1 driver/runtime components and developer libraries for systems that support Vulkan. Vulkan is a low-overhead, cross-platform 3D graphics and compute API maintained by the Khronos Group.

You may see several Vulkan runtimes listed (e.g., 1.0.65.1, 1.1.108.0, 1.2.131.2). This is harmless. Different installers may leave separate registry entries. However, only the newest version’s DLLs are actually used (typically stored in C:\Windows\System32). Older entries can be uninstalled safely, or you can leave them—they consume little space. vulkanrt-1.1.108.0-installer

Vulkan is a low-overhead, cross-platform 3D graphics and compute API (Application Programming Interface). Developed by the Khronos Group (the same consortium behind OpenGL), Vulkan allows software developers—especially game developers—to communicate directly with a computer’s GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) with very little CPU overhead. Unlike older APIs like OpenGL or DirectX 11, Vulkan gives developers fine-grained control over memory, threading, and command buffers, which can lead to significantly better performance on multi-core processors.

In simpler terms: Vulkan helps modern games and 3D applications run faster and more efficiently. After installation, confirm that VulkanRT 1

If you uninstall and later find you need it, simply reinstall your graphics drivers or launch a game that requires Vulkan (many will prompt to reinstall automatically).

In most cases, yes. If you play modern PC games or use 3D modeling/rendering software (like Blender with Cycles GPU compute), you should keep Vulkan installed. Removing it will not harm your computer, but any Vulkan-based application will fail to launch or run in a fallback mode (e.g., switching to OpenGL or DirectX, often with lower performance). This is harmless

Even if you don’t actively know that a game uses Vulkan, many titles fall back to it if available. The runtime uses negligible disk space (usually under 100 MB) and does not run background processes. It only activates when a Vulkan application starts.

Yes. Go to Control Panel → Programs and Features (or Settings → Apps in Windows 10/11). Look for "Vulkan Run Time Libraries" or a similarly named entry. Uninstalling removes the runtime DLLs.

Modern GPU drivers from NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel include Vulkan support. However, specific versions of the Vulkan Runtime (like the vulkanrt-1.1.108.0-installer) are sometimes bundled separately with games or creative software to ensure compatibility with a particular Vulkan feature set.


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