Totally disagree with youAnyone who has a VRR display knows it’s a highly over rated feature.
I may be lucky but I have a C9 which is VRR enables and a XSX I haven’t once noticed it as a plus which I kind of get is the point and I could swallow that if I didn’t have a PS5 and have never seen tearing in any game I have played or stutter etc.
It will come out for PS5 and people will be very underwhelmed.
I am Riky. We are ALL RikyI am Riky.
I find the poll results surprising at 127 responses. I didn't expect to see VRR ownership above the 50% mark.
Sorry for the double posts but I whole heartedly disagree. I don't understand the comment " I don't notice it as a plus" as that is exactly what VRR is supposed to do, as in just work by eliminate tearing and perceived break drops. Are you saying you see prominent screen tearing and frame drops?Anyone who has a VRR display knows it’s a highly over rated feature.
I may be lucky but I have a C9 which is VRR enables and a XSX I haven’t once noticed it as a plus which I kind of get is the point and I could swallow that if I didn’t have a PS5 and have never seen tearing in any game I have played or stutter etc.
It will come out for PS5 and people will be very underwhelmed.
Did you activate 120 Hz in the console settings and use the HDMI 1? Normally the tv detects the optimal settings automatically.Will the LG C1 OLED support this, My Series X is supposed to check what your display is capable of, but selected 60htz rather then 120htz, so not sure I trust the auto feature.
G-Sync (by Nvidia) is one way to achieve VRR, FreeSync (by AMD) another.What are the differences between VRR and G-Sync? If any.
What is that a clip of? All I see is blur.
No my point is , it’s a nice to have and it’s cool to have a feature enabled or supported on your hardware.Sorry for the double posts but I whole heartedly disagree. I don't understand the comment " I don't notice it as a plus" as that is exactly what VRR is supposed to do, as in just work by eliminate tearing and perceived break drops. Are you saying you see prominent screen tearing and frame drops?
I immediately noticed a difference in perceived fluidity when upgrading from a standard 60hz display to a 120hz VRR enabled television.
Thanks! Then yes, I habe both a monitor and a TV capable of that, both plugged to my PC.G-Sync (by Nvidia) is one way to achieve VRR, FreeSync (by AMD) another.
Some of the people here claiming they have a TV that supports VRR:I'm actually surprised the results are this high on here. The way people talk down about VRR you would of thought barely anyone had it.
It seems VRR is def something to take into account when judging these comparisons going forward.
I find the poll results surprising at 127 responses. I didn't expect to see VRR ownership above the 50% mark.
VRR and Freesync TVs have been available for years, Samsung first introduced the feature 4 years ago.Some of the people here claiming they have a TV that supports VRR:
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About that....Ricky redeemed... The thread.
Virtually everyone on PC has had VRR for years.Some of the people here claiming they have a TV that supports VRR:
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Both my Samsung TV and my Samsung monitor has VRR, Gsync. What a time to be alive!
This is about TVs though isn't itVirtually everyone on PC has had VRR for years.
This is about TVs though isn't it
Might need a VRR enabled display.What is that a clip of? All I see is blur.
You shouldn't base that around just this Forum.
There are more PS4 owners than PS5 owners in the world and much, much more non VRS owners than VRR owners.
About that....
Based on the poll, it looks like Riky has at least 10 ALTs.
Neither of which the PS5 will support when it eventually gets VRR.G-Sync (by Nvidia) is one way to achieve VRR, FreeSync (by AMD) another.
Did you try for yourself? It depends dramatically on your model, the FPS/Hz range and your sensibility and what you regards as image quality. I'd recommend to try it out. For example, in certain Hz areas there's a very subtle flicker in black areas when Hz/fps are changing. But to notice you have to a) watch carefully b) play a game with a very dark sequence or constant dark areas and c) have always drastically fluctuating fps. And even if all of this is true, it's not like the image quality itself suffers (but again, depends on your understanding of IQ) or inaccurate colours apart from black in that case.I purchased a VRR capable TV back in January of 2021, but I have yet to use the feature. What's stopping me from using it is the conflicting reports that VRR causes image quality to decrease dramatically or that it causes inaccurate colors. I'm not willing to sacrifice image quality for a few saved frames.
Imagine making this post the day people started playing Elden Ring. The game is a shitfest without VRR.Anyone who has a VRR display knows it’s a highly over rated feature.
I may be lucky but I have a C9 which is VRR enables and a XSX I haven’t once noticed it as a plus which I kind of get is the point and I could swallow that if I didn’t have a PS5 and have never seen tearing in any game I have played or stutter etc.
It will come out for PS5 and people will be very underwhelmed.
Look man I’m not trying to say your wrong or anything I’m just voicing my opinion that I don’t think it will be a game changer and it will for sure be nice since it was promised I just don’t think it’s a major highlight or amazing feature.Imagine making this post the day people started playing Elden Ring. The game is a shitfest without VRR.
P.S. the fact that you don't notice it is exactly the point. It's supposed to make you not notice.
I'll die on the hill of VRR any day, and PS5 users will be happy the say it's finally supported.