Title says it all (i have turned on 165hz on settings). Its a cheap monitor, do some 165hz monitors not truly give you that experience? Or are my eyes fucked

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    1 year ago

    You’re only going to notice if the thing playing goes up to 165fps. If you’re, say, watching a movie or video you won’t notice anything because there’s nothing to notice.

    Play a game that you can get really high FPS in (maybe Half Life 1 which a modern machine should have no trouble getting 300+). Limit it to 60. Check it out. Then go up to 144. Then 165.

    Also if you have an nVidia GPU, it may not be setting the refresh rate properly. I constantly have this issue with driver updates resetting it back to 30hz on my machine. You gotta go into the Nvidia control panel, find the display settings and scroll down somewhere toward the bottom is a refresh rate setting. Change that to the highest your display can use.

    • Ilflish@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      An addendum to this, the jump between 60 and 120 is not as noticeable outside of dynamic movement so even though you may see a slight difference when looking, unless you use M+K it won’t feel that big. With mouse and keyboard quick mouse adjustments should feel smoother. And this isn’t a knock on FPS over 60, just that the difference between 30 and 60 can feel very big when you snap between them

    • SharkAttak@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Let’s not forget that the industry always likes to exxagerate with the goal to sell… IMO refresh rate is the latest victim of “bigger number is BETTER!” marketing.

  • Swarfega@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Have you configured your OS to use a higher refresh rate in monitor settings? The difference is night and day…

  • Schneemensch@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I am totally with you. I have had a 144Hz monitor for 2 years now. I am 100% sure that everything was configured correctly and I could spot some small differences in the UFO test. But other than that I do not feel any differences in day-to-day activities or games. Windows reset my frequency settings occasionally, but I never noticed it.

  • Turun@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I have used https://github.com/Nixola/VRRTest before to check the refresh frequency. I use X11 and wanted to check if my 144Hz monitors work with my older 60Hz one. Set the test mode to squares and the frame rate to twice your monitor’s refresh rate. You should see every second square light up. If this is not the case, play around with the frame rate in the program until every second square lights up.

    I can’t see the difference either though. Yes, the mouse moves a bit quicker if I pay attention to it. But I do not care or notice, to be honest.

  • rasensprenger@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I’m also unable to see the difference directly, but everything just feels more snappy. If you can’t feel it, maybe you have some extra latency from somewhere else

  • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I’m 100% sure if the majority of people in here claiming they see the difference were actually tested, they’d fail it. Something like

    • 60Hz, 120Hz, 144Hz, 165Hz, 200Hz
    • multiple game scenes and clips:
      • varying FPS ranging from 29 to 320fps
      • quiet and busy (not much stuff happening vs a lot of stuff happening)
      • slow and fast camera or background movements

    Take the Cartesian product of that for all the different possibilities and play them a random set thereof. Maybe 20 or so.

    It’s just like screen resolution. If you sit at arms length or further away from your screen (which you should) and increase the resolution of your screen, everything becomes smaller (icons, text, images). That means you’ll have to scale them up to be at the same size as when they were at a lower resolution.
    Also, at a certain distance, you become unable to spot details of a certain size --> you physically will not be able to see the different between 1080p, 2k, and 4k from that distance. It’s called visual acuity. I bet you, if you put did a similar test as above with video resolution, screen resolution, screen size, and distance from screen, the majority would start do much worse than they think they can.

    It’s mostly marketing and “bigger number = better” think.

    • Crit@links.hackliberty.org
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      1 year ago

      And I’m 100% you’re either testing incorrectly or have some issue that makes it so you can’t see high FPS or something. I could definitely tell the difference between 20, 60 and 165fps, maybe not small increments like going from 140 to 160, but it’s definitely noticeable when things are suddenly smoother. Sure you can fake some of it with motion blur and good frame pacing, but high FPS is definitely noticeable, at least in my case up to 160, but I haven’t got a monitor that goes higher to compare.

  • beefpeach@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    I’ll never forget when I went from 60hz to 165hz, everything seemed so fluid and smooth. I couldn’t imagine going back.

  • Satelllliiiiiiiteeee@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Is it possible that there are ghosting issues with the panel? I had a 120hz monitor at work at one point that had ghosting issues so bad it made it look barely any better than a 60hz panel. Going from 60hz to 120hz+ should definitely be noticeable to most people

  • girsaysdoom@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    You may have to set the refresh rate manually to go higher than 60hz. Things should look much smoother.

    Run ‘xrandr -q’ and see if it gives you multiple refresh rates for your displays.

    Also, what GPU are you using?

      • bitwyze@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Is your monitor plugged into your GPU, as opposed to the plug on your motherboard (which would go to your integrated graphics on your CPU, if it’s supported)?