• Ignacio [he/him]@sopuli.xyz
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    3 years ago

    Any game above or equal to 30 fps is good for me. And some people argued with me saying “NOOOO! You cannot play this game below 60 fps!” You cannot, but I can 😝

  • nighty@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    You gotta appreciate what you have sometimes. I remember my time as a kid playing games at potato quality (420p or less!!!), just for more than 30fps.

  • Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 years ago

    Here’s some math:

    30 FPS means a frame is changed every 33.33ms;
    60 FPS means a frame is changed every 16.66ms;
    144 FPS means a frame is changed every 6.94ms.

    The differences between 29-30 FPS, 59-60 FPS and 143-144 FPS are respectively 1.14ms, 0.28ms and 0.048ms (or 48μs (or a spoonful of context switches on Windows 10 (windows 10 does many context switches))).

    If you know someone who complains that their frame rate is 100/s instead of 144/s, they complain about a 3.05ms delay that speedrunners and probably competitive players would struggle to notice.

    • OneOrTheOther2028@sh.itjust.works
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      3 years ago

      It would be hard for speedrunners to make action on those 3.05ms, but they would notice it. I can feel when an image is choppier than it can be.

      It’s not the end of the world, I’m finding lower frame rates aren’t as frustrating as I remember now that I’m doing a lot of work on the steamdeck and rog ally. 45 is as low as I’ll go on games that are pretty though. A lot of my early time in a game is spent tweaking and finding maybe 2 ‘best’ configurations, one for higher frames and one for better visuals and make my decision from there on what I can comfortably tolerate.

    • Dudewitbow@lemmy.ml
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      3 years ago

      Its why I usually say it only matters after every doubling of hz, 30 > 60/75 > 120/144 > 240 > 480 with dimishing returns based on content being displayed.

      165 is effectively 144, and any framerate near each bracket is paired with whatever’s closest, with the exceptions such as 360hz panels with bfi are different than ones without it.

      • Sonotsugipaa@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 years ago

        It’s also why I run DRG on a 40f/s cap, upscaled from 90% of my monitor’s resolution and mostly low settings even if I’m capable of 4 times as much load :3

        (that and the generated heat being unbearable as it is)
        ((and the fact that I’m stingy and if I can decimate my power consumption with a relatively low graphical fidelity difference, I will))

  • pancake@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    I used to play Kenshi at 1-2 fps. Now I’ve got a better CPU so it’s not fun anymore…

  • UsernameLost@lemmy.ml
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    3 years ago

    I played on a Radeon 7700 and a shit i3 (low end of mid tier when I built the PC in 2013) until 2020. I ended up replacing the entire system, although I originally just wanted to upgrade the CPU, which would need a new motherboard, which meant new RAM. I already had a new PSU, so really just needed a new GPU and case to have a whole new PC. I had to wait a year in the step up queue for EVGA to get a 3080 (bought a 2060 after trying unsuccessfully to buy a 3080 directly), but definitely worth the wait.

    I averaged 20 fps for years on low settings. I had no idea how bad it was until I upgraded. Now I get 90-120fps on high/ultra settings for most games (except Star Citizen, because Star Citizen)