Загрузка видео...

Не удалось загрузить видео

На главную

Another day, another odd and old-school technical issue in #Nioh3. This game doesn’t just expect the frame rate to hit its FPS cap to work properly, it also wants the FPS to line up with the display refresh rate. Using the 60 fps cap at 120Hz (or higher) can...

37,677 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

Комментарии: 0

Нет доступных комментариев

Здесь появятся комментарии из оригинального поста

Похожие видео

In my previous post about the #Nioh3 demo, I mentioned that when the game isn’t consistently holding 60 FPS or 120 FPS, several issues can show up. Here’s a clearer breakdown of what's going on. The main reason is that the game speed and physics are tied to the frame rate. When you enable the 120 FPS cap, the engine start overreacting and pushes CPU usage very high, even if the game is still running at around 60 FPS (as shown in the first example). In the second clip, you can see the uneven, jittery camera movement I mentioned before. Notice how much smoother 60 FPS and 120 FPS look compared to the unlocked side. Also, camera movement at 60 FPS is slightly faster than at 120 FPS. In the third clip, player movement is slower when the frame rate is unlocked. This doesn’t happen all the time, but it shows up often enough to be noticeable. Because of how the Katana Engine behaves, the game is clearly designed around 60 FPS. Running at 120 FPS is possible, but it’s only recommended if your system can maintain that target almost all the time, which isn’t easy to achieve. There’s also an alternative workaround where you select the 60 (locked) option and enable Frame Generation (DLSS or FSR 3), as shown in the last clip. The downside is that DLSS Frame Generation tends to show the same stuttery look as when the frame rate isn’t holding a fixed target, likely due to Reflex keeping the frame rate slightly below target. FSR Frame Generation, on the other hand, looks much smoother and works better here.

BenchmarKing

17,820 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

#Battlefield6 NVIDIA DLSS 4 Reveal Trailer 📽️ The game includes support for DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, DLSS Frame Generation, DLSS Super Resolution, DLAA, and NVIDIA Reflex. Desktop GPUs Performance At 4K, Ultra settings, DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution multiply Battlefield 6's GeForce RTX 50 Series frame rates by an average of 3.8X. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5090 performance rockets to over 470 FPS. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5080 exceeds 330 FPS. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is in touching distance of 300 FPS. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5070 surpasses 230 FPS. At 2560x1440, Ultra settings, DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution increase Battlefield 6 frame rates by an average of 3X. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5090 runs at almost 600 FPS. ▪️ GeForce RTX 5060 Ti over 240 FPS. At 1920x1080, Ultra settings, the combination of DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution boost Battlefield 6’s GeForce RTX 50 Series frame rates by an average of 2.9X. ▪️ Allowing every GPU in NVIDIA's line-up to play at over 230 FPS, maxing out at over 740 FPS on the GeForce RTX 5090. Laptop GPUs Performance GeForce RTX 50 Series Laptop GPUs benefit similarly from DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation and DLSS Super Resolution, with Battlefield 6 frame rates multiplied by 3X on average at 2560x1600, with Ultra settings, enabling performance of up to 360 FPS. At 1920x1080, Ultra settings, GeForce RTX 50 Series Laptop GPU performance increases by 2.8X on average, enabling Battlefield 6 frame rates to surpass 480 FPS, and the range to run at over 200 frames per second.

Battlefield Bulletin

30,559 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад