By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Michael-5 said:

Also I talked to one of my bigger PC gaming friends. He said you can cap a game to be limited to 30 or 60FPS, but you can't lock it. If the computer cannot process the image, then the FPS will dip (at least for games). There may be programs that can lock FPS, but you can't do that for games, you can only cap it.

Capping is effectively the same as locking if your PC can handle it, and that's not a problem, at least for older games (and by 'older' I don't mean games released in the 90s).

Michael-5 said:
pezus said:
Michael-5 said:

Got an 80% in that course. Even ha time to draw pictures on the exam.

This is how things work, accept it.

Played a PC game yet? If you don't see a difference here, you're doing something wrong: http://www.boallen.com/fps-compare.html 

I don't see a difference between 30FPS and 60FPS. 15FPS I do, but not the last 2.

Too bad because there is a difference. But in case you want something that's easier to see, see this.