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@Sebash92 Give me a few as I am working on the other two game rigs . But fast version my FPS do go up and down just my average is 144- 180fps depending on map and whats going on. Sorry if I said it bad. Edit and my 49in screen fully comes into play just a guess but if I was on a 27in 144hrz screen I would be locked more into around 200FPS or 150-200 fps
Jumping in on this conversation... you guys seem to know what you're doing but for everyone else who may not follow... correct me if I'm wrong here but in terms of FPS, I like to think of it like rhythm, or analogous to clapping on beat to a song. If you have say a 60 Hz monitor, then 120 FPS in game is at double its rhythm and is on beat. If you're playing "off beat" at say 83 FPS, then the frame rate is not synced, and you'll see that mismatch in-game (e.g. screen tears). This is part of the point of V-Sync and framerate limiters - to sync the FPS produced with what your monitor can handle, for a smooth visual. A few FPS off won't really make a difference, but the more you have will cause screen tears and other non-desirable effects.
- 4 months ago@SterlingARCH3R not really, you get screen tearing only when your fps is lower than your screen refresh rate. Also the point of vsync is to sync vertical refreshes of your screen not to match it to fps (although it does that too). If you turn off vsync and set your refresh rate low you can see that the screen is split in half in most cases with 2 different frames on the bottom and top half and vsync alleviates that.
- ElliotLH4 months agoHero+
This thread hasn't been active since 2020 so I'm going to lock it.
Feel free to open a new thread to continue the discussion.
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