Windows offers you a variety of power plans. Depending on your situation, they let you customize the way your machine uses power to either extend the battery life or squeeze more performance out of your computer.
A power plan is a collection of hardware and system settings that manages how your computer uses power.
Power plans can help you save energy, maximize system performance, or achieve a balance between the two.
All users (standard and administrator) will be able to make changes to any power plan settings.
Changes made to a power plan will affect all users that have chosen the same power plan as their default active power scheme.
If you only see balanced plan in the power settings then it means you are missing high performance and ultimate power plan.
To get high performance and ultimate power plan you need to execute respective commands which are given below to get that power plan in the command prompt or windows powershell.
Ultimate Performance:
powercfg -duplicatescheme e9a42b02-d5df-448d-aa00-03f14749eb61
High Performance:
powercfg -duplicatescheme 8c5e7fda-e8bf-4a96-9a85-a6e23a8c635c
Balanced:
powercfg -duplicatescheme 381b4222-f694-41f0-9685-ff5bb260df2e
Power saver:
powercfg -duplicatescheme a1841308-3541-4fab-bc81-f71556f20b4a
For more information watch video tutorial