slowmo said:
brendude13 said:
slowmo said:
brendude13 said:
The difference between 720p and 1080p for gaming is very noticable.
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Not unless you're on about PC gaming as 99% of PS3 and 360 games are upscaled from 720p. In that case it's more indicative of a poor scaler in your display rather than the resolution that's making the difference. If you mean in future that the difference will be noticable then I conceed you're correct , provided games are rendered at 1080p natively. I still think there is a market for 720p 3D gaming next gen though as I don't think displays are cheap enough to do 1080p 3D gaming widespread and the consoles will not have the horspeower either.
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Oh yes, I meant PC gaming. My friend has a 1080p monitor and Battlefield 3 wasn't running so smoothly. He said he would drop the graphics settings but I told him to drop the resolution to 720p, I couldn't believe how much of a difference it made.
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It's a double whammy when you drop the resolution because as soon as you go below a panels native resolution you always get the slightest "fuzz" on edges. In the scenario you mentioned a 720p panel would actually probably look better and sharper than your friends 1080p TV at a 720p resolution, it would be sharper and reduce the perceived quality gap. It's just another limit of the display technology.
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Not sure if you're talking about something specifically related to PC game settings or not; I don't game on PC and am not schooled in this area. But if you're referring to HDTV panels, that's not the case. A good 1080p panel displays 720p every bit as good as a native 720p TV. Of course, there can always be exceptions, but that's not a limit of the display technology, but rather the fault of a specific TV, and is definitely the exception, not the rule.