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Showing results for tags 'v-sync'.
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Hello,How do i stop screen tearing on my NVIDIA gt 1030? I tried enabling V-Sync in the options but i has no effect when i do a screen tearing test
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When I turn V-sync on, games feel much smoother but I get annoyed by the occasional frame stutters (framerate dipping slightly below monitor refresh rate). When I turn v-sync off, screen tearing starts to become a problem. The weird thing is, my framerate with v-sync turned off is well above my monitor refresh rate of 144hz. Shouldn't my gpu then, with v-sync turned on, have no problems running at 144 FPS, so that I won't have frame stutter?
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So I've recently bought a new monitor, LG 27GL850-B. It comes with FreeSync and G-Sync, and has been capping my game on occasions at 71fps in both Full Screen and Full Screen Windowed modes. I have turned off G-Sync on the monitor, and V-Sync is off in Nvidia control panel in both global settings and individual applications too. I also have no fps cap in game either. Running on a DP not HDMI. Any help is appreciated.
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Hello guys, I've been playing all my life with 1080p 60hz monitors and I just recently upgraded to 1440p 144hz. I've read about V-sinc, free-sync and MBR and I can say that I understand what they do but I still get a really hard time trying to understand how would they benefit me, so I'd like to give you 2 scenarios of very different fps games (which I think is the most relevant genre for these settings) and hear what you think I should do. Valorant: my PC can push between 300 and 500 fps on 1440p depending on graphics settings, I know more fps equals less input lag but I'd guess that the jump from 300 to 500 its unnoticeable compared to let's say 100 to 300 (please correct me if I'm wrong) so I normally go for higher settings with 300~350 fps just for the looks. Warzone: I'm playing with 100~120 fps on 1440p but I'm considering to downscale to 1080p so I can get at least 144fps without sacrificing fov (depending in what I learn here). So, these two games are played very differently, in Valorant I'd prioritize input lag and response time while in Warzone I'd prioritize sight clearness during quick, long camera movements. Knowing this, should I enable any of the mentioned settings? and if I should, how would they benefit me?
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So Im about to build a new gaming rig from ground up and altho I have pretty good picture of what my rig will be like, I have one question (two actually). Build specs: z270, 7700k, 16gb ram and pure NVMe storage. Currently my monitor of choice is HP Envy 34c. This I have pretty much settled for unless something convincing enough comes up in this thread. The biggest reasons for my choise were the aspect ratio and this monitors impeccable native contrast. Image quality is magnitudes more important for me than refresh rates beyond 60hz. Same goes for ingame graphics in which the appearance of single frame means much more than those high frame rates. But regardless of all the above mentioned, and maybe because of all that, I have tried my best to make sure I can V-sync all games to 60hz, And the question is, is that possible or am I doomed to see drops to 30hz frequently? Follow up question: If it turns out that this build might indeed run into significant drops to 30hz with V-sync, which di you think would be better: Opting for 1080ti instead or to spend that extra money on a G-sync monitor. Bearing in mind that all G-sync monitors are a compromise what comes to static contrast
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I usually get around 55-80 frames per seconds in all the games I play on a 60hz monitor. So I was wondering if I should turn V-Sync on or off? What are the advantages and disadvantages?
- 6 replies
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- v-sync
- graphics card
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I've had my Acer Predator XB281HK for a few months now and one of the features is GSync. However I can't tell the difference between using VSync and GSync. As someone that's always used V-Sync for 60 FPS gaming, I cannot for the life of me see what all the fuss is about. Although there's plenty of articles explaining in theory what GSync does I still don't understand it, and I certainly can't perceive the difference to gameplay, even in a fast-paced game like Gears of War. Am I blind or am I missing something? Also I don't think GSync even works half the time and doesn't play well with some games.
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hello, so im running bf1 more that 60fps but it doesnt fell like (60 fps), when i activate v-sync this solves the problem but it creates a lot of tearing so i ended up using adaptative mode in nvidia control pannel settings and triple buffering and this seems to solve this problem , now it is smooth and without tearing, my question is , this creates a lot of imput lag? more than normal v-sync? and if so , how much more that without a v-sync mode enabled? thank you in advance
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On my GTX 960 4GB fast sync has become absolutely mandatory for me - much smoother gameplay than with v-sync + triple buffering when I drop below 60 FPS and no screen tearing whatsoever and much less input latency. Fast sync works with almost every game which also supports triple buffering out of the box and if a game only uses double buffering you can force triple buffering + fast sync in the control center it actually works. Just used that combination for GTA IV and it made that horrible mess of a PC port actually enjoyable to play at 1080p maximum settings. Seems to be a hugely underapreciated feature which nobody ever talks about so I'd be interested to read about your experiences with Fast sync. ATTENTION: Please only respond if you actually use fast sync and have an idea what I'm talking about.
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I just upgraded from Windows 10 from 7 and started to realize there was a significant amount of input lag when playing a game in windowed or windowed borderless. I looked into it and found out DWM forces v-sync on win 10. Is there any way to disable this? On windows 7 there was an easy work around on this.
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- windows 10
- dmv
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Hi everyone. I have problems on screen tearing on my monitor only on YouTube videos. In games I can activate the v-sync setting and everything is fine. What can I do to eliminate this screen tearing when playing videos on YouTube? Please reply me thanks
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Hello everyone, after watching tons of youtube videos about v-sync, g-sync and fast-sync technologies, i would like to raise this simple question "when do you actually use each technology in gaming" in which scenarios? I have gtx 1080 pared to an 1440p 165hz g-sync monitor from asus. Playing games like Rocket League or CSGO gives me 165+ fps, sometimes up to 250, the monitor is actually supporting maximum 165hz, g-sync is active from 30hz up to 144hz. Some games like Witcher 3 give me lower fps up to 90hz, in this case i think i go for g-sync right? Could someone explain what technology to use in each case, without locking fps. Can i also use Fast-Sync and G-Sync simultaneously? (from the video below i understood that locking fps to your monitors max hz rate will give you some latency in gaming) am i getting it right? Any answer or advice will be appreciated.
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Hey, I have an Acer X34A Display that has G-sync. Since this is the very first monitor that I've owned that has G-sync enabled I'm a bit curious. Should I Leave V-sync on with G-sync or is it recommended I turn V-sync off and then let G-sync do it's "thing"? Also should V-sync be enabled in nVidia control panel and off in games? How does all this work? I've looked around the web, but I seem to find a lot of conflicting answers. Could anyone shed light on this for me? would be forever thankful!
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Hello guys, I have a problem with my laptop... I have an intel cpu as the integrated graphics and a dedicated nvidia gpu. The problem is when i run games with the integrated gpu, v-sync is off, but when i run them with the dedicated gpu, v-sync is on... V-sync is set to application settings under the intel hd graphics control panel and to off in nvidia control panel's global and app's specific section. This only happens when a game is set to fullscreen and i really need fullscreen and the dedicated gpu to get some frames... Any help would be appreciated! CPU: Intel Pentium 2020M GPU: Nvidia GT610M OS: Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
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- windows 10
- intel
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Hello there! So, im having this problem for the first time in my life. My screen is "waving" after my PC hits more than 60FPS. This doesnt make any sence to me, because ive builded many PCs and i havent ever faced this problem before. Some people say this is because i have 60Hz monitor, but i refuse to belive that, because as i said; This is the first time with my PC and monitor. Also my brother has PC with 60Hz screen and he can just take V-sync off and play with unlimited FPS without any "waving". I have tried different monitors, cables and graphics cards, but no. Id just like to play games with unlimited FPS. Specs: i7-930 GTX 680 Asus P6X58D-E 16GB RAM 500W PSU 500GB HDD Windows 10 Pro 64-bit HP LE2201w (1680x1050@60Hz) VGA on monitor DVI on PC Thank you in advance! -Matti
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I'm trying to explain to my brother what v-sync in games is and I remember Linus had an excellent video detailing exactly how monitors update frames and how higher frame rates from graphics cards is important. A great part of the video was an info-graphic showing exactly how and when the frame gets updated. For the life of me I can't find the right video.. can anyone help me?
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Hello I got a Acer Predator z35p recently and i keep having issues when trying to enable g-sync. Lets use league of legends as an example I will have in game fps limited to 117 with rtss and have v-sync off. My game never runs over 117fps but i still get tearing when g-sync is enabled. like super visible. If i turn on v-sync ingame, it removes the tearing, but introduces the classic input delay, tho pretty small amount. In other games like the new call of duty i will have only g-sync enabled and i can play for a while. but ever so often the g-sync module is like "nope" and it resets for a few seconds. (I have 90 fps and then the g-sync indicator goes to 120, which is the refresh rate of the monitor, and this causes stuttering.) Any of you who have experienced something similar. If i took a blind guess, I think there is something wrong with the monitor, which would be a big sad :(
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Playing mostly taxing games like COD 4 blackout, witcher III, gtaV and the likes I am always faced with the same issue. Namely: to choose between (1) v-sync enabled, no screen tearing but stutters and high input lag or (2) v-sync off, screen tearing heavily but no input lag. I have tested this extensively and this seems to be the case in most games. In fast games like COD4 Blackout I cannot stand the high input lag that comes with v-sync. But at the same time, I cannot stand the extreme screen tearing (sometimes 3 tears simultaneously) that occurs without v-sync. So I would like to ask your advice. What do you do to solve this issue? I have heard G-Sync monitors try to solve this issue. My question to you is: Do you have a g-sync monitor and does it actually work as good as advertised? Or is there still some input lag or screen tearing going on?
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I'm currently looking after a 120 hz to 144 hz 1920x1080 monitor for gaming. Is it worth to spend the extra money for a G-sync monitor? Should I just use V-sync instead? What is the differenece and is it sometihng that I will clearly see?
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Hi all, I have recently purchased a 1440p/144Hz screen (Samsung LC27JG50) and I am fiddling with my 1060 6gb a bit to get the most out of it. I manage to get decent framerates and in some games like CS:GO I can use the 144Hz. I was tinkering with the v-sync a bit, and decided to put the v-sync setting in the control panel to 'fast'. MSI Afterburner still shows a framerate of 200+ though. My theory is that the since the GPU still creates the frames but they are just not pushed to the monitor, MSI Afterburner shows framerates over 144Hz. Is this correct or is the setting not working/am I not understanding this properly? Thanks
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Hi, I looked for this online but everything I find is just always the same with some people saying to leave v-sync off and some say that g-sync monitors are supposed to have v-sync on to work best. I have a g-sync compatible monitor but there is still tearing when I move my mouse up and down (no noticeable tearing when moving side to side), this is with v-sync off in game and v-sync off in NVIDIA control panel. Just now I tried turning v-sync on in the control panel and that has 2 options, "On" and "Fast". There is still tearing with in on "fast" but it slightly less than having it off, switching to "On" eliminates tearing entirely. I don't thing the in-game v-sync switch matters at all now so I'll just ignore that. My concern is that when I turn v-sync to "On" I will have more latency (I think it's around 7ms at 144hz) and I will be at a bigger disadvantage, then again The tearing when moving my mouse up and down is also very distracting and may even be worse than the extra latency. I have my FPS limited to 143 to keep it in the g-sync range of my monitor. Last option I have is to turn all of them off, see what average fps I can get in the game and limit it to just below that (around 500 fps in valorant) to keep latency low but also avoid a cpu bottleneck which would introduce latency yet again. There is also the "Low latency mode" option which I have on ultra (shown on the screenshot). Thanks
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Whenever I play a game, I turn on V-sync, and recently I've had troubles with it. I'll go to play R6 or Rocket League and I'm stuttering and getting 56fps. My monitor's refresh rate is 60hz which is why I'm confused when my game only runs at 56fps. When I turn off V-sync, it goes as far as 200+fps (in rocket league at least). It's been like this for days and I can't find any Tom's Hardware guides. My Specs are: Gigabyte A-B350-Gaming 3 Motherboard Ryzen 5 1600x CPU 2x8gb (16gb) Trident Z RGB 3200mhz Memory MSI Trident GTX 1080ti Graphics card Thermaltake 650 watt PSU Thanks, -Wyatt
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My monitor is 1440p 75hz and paired with a Ryzen 5 2600 overclocked and a factory overclocked GTX 1070 Ti. If I use V-Sync will it impact my FPS performance much? I have also been told you don't need it if your FPS is over your display refresh rate, is this true? Essentially what's the best way of not having screen tearing? Keeping your FPS over your monitor refresh rate or just using V-Sync and maxing all game setting?
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I know this question is always asked, debated, and what it seems to look like a death battle with much toxic debate on it, but I wanted to get a strait answer and final answer on the bit question. Can you use V or G-sync on a FreeSync monitor and in visa-versa using AMDSync on a G or V-sync monitor. What is the problems, the ups and downs, and what is most wise when it comes to either buying a monitor tailored to the card, or does it not matter that it is just more of a way to get support and to avoid going from forum to forum trying to ask answers. I would like to know if buying a FreeSync monitor would still would when enabling V-sync or would buying into 'proprietary' realms and getting a supported monitor. I would like to see a follow up video on one of linus videos and then testing to see about mixing and matching to see if there is a noticeably difference or if it just the at this point, up to the buy to get either open sourced. or name brand.