You launch CS 1.6 on a modern widescreen monitor and get a 4:3 image floating in the middle with thick black bars on either side, or a stretched, distorted picture. This is a display-scaling problem, not a bug in the game: CS defaults to a 4:3 resolution, and how your GPU maps that onto a 16:9 panel decides whether you get bars, stretch, or a correct widescreen image. Here is how to control it.
1. Understand what is happening
CS 1.6 renders at whatever resolution you pick. On an old 4:3 monitor, 640x480 or 1024x768 filled the screen. On a 16:9 panel, a 4:3 resolution has three possible outcomes depending on your GPU's scaling mode:
- Aspect / centered — the 4:3 image is shown at its true ratio with black bars filling the unused width. Correct proportions, wasted screen.
- Stretched / full-screen — the 4:3 image is stretched to fill 16:9, so everything looks wide and models look fat. No bars, wrong shapes.
- Native widescreen — you pick an actual 16:9 resolution and the image fills the panel correctly. This is what you want.
2. Pick a native widescreen resolution in-game
The cleanest fix is to run a resolution that matches your monitor's aspect ratio. In the game: Options → Video, set the resolution to a 16:9 value your panel supports (for a 1080p monitor, 1280x720 or 1920x1080), and make sure the renderer is OpenGL. You can also set it from launch options in Steam (right-click CS → Properties → Set Launch Options):
-w 1280 -h 720
With a true 16:9 resolution there is no aspect mismatch, so there are no bars and no stretch — the GPU has nothing to letterbox. Many competitive players still prefer 4:3 for the larger-feeling models, and accept either bars or stretch as a trade-off; if you are one of them, use the GPU setting below to choose which.
3. If you want 4:3, set GPU scaling deliberately
To play a 4:3 resolution and choose bars vs stretch, set the scaling mode in your GPU control panel — not in the game:
- NVIDIA — NVIDIA Control Panel → Display → Adjust desktop size and position. Choose Full-screen to stretch (no bars) or Aspect ratio to keep bars, and set "Perform scaling on" to GPU. Enabling "Override the scaling mode set by games" makes it stick.
- AMD — AMD Software → Display → Scaling Mode. Full panel stretches, Preserve aspect ratio keeps bars, Center shows the image 1:1 in the middle.
- Intel — Intel Graphics Command Center → Display → Scale. Full Screen stretches, Maintain Aspect Ratio keeps bars, Center Image shows it 1:1.
The key detail people miss: on many setups the monitor also has its own scaling, and it can override the GPU. If the GPU setting does nothing, the display is doing the scaling — set the GPU to "perform scaling on GPU" so the graphics card wins, or change the monitor's aspect setting in its on-screen menu.
4. Full-screen vs windowed
Scaling only applies in exclusive full-screen. If you launch with -window or -noborder, the game is a window on your desktop and the GPU scaling modes do not apply — the window is simply its pixel size. If you use borderless windowed at your desktop resolution with a 4:3 aspect, you will see bars that no GPU setting removes because it is a window, not a scaled full-screen surface. For the scaling options above to work, run full-screen.
Common errors
- Image is stretched and models look fat — a 4:3 resolution with GPU/monitor scaling set to full-screen/stretch. Switch to a 16:9 resolution or set scaling to "Aspect ratio".
- Bars remain no matter the GPU setting — the monitor is doing the scaling. Set "Perform scaling on GPU" (NVIDIA) or change the monitor's own aspect setting.
- GPU scaling greyed out — you are on a laptop's internal panel, or the desktop is already at native res with nothing to scale. Change the in-game resolution first.
- Setting reverts after launch — "Override the scaling mode set by games" is off (NVIDIA); enable it.
- No bars but blurry — you are upscaling a low 4:3 resolution to a high-res panel. Raise the in-game resolution.
Verification
Load a map and look at a round object — a barrel, a player model's head. If circles are round and the image fills the screen, the aspect ratio is correct. If it fills the screen but circles are ovals, you are stretched; if circles are round but there are bars, you are in aspect mode. Adjust the in-game resolution and the GPU scaling mode until you get the combination you want. If the game will not reach the desktop at all — a truly black screen on launch rather than bars — that is a different problem; see the black screen on launch fix.









