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Pemalite said:
Peh said:

What do you mean by "depends on the panel"?

I don't think a panel can get rid of the blurry picture by upscalling.

Nevertheless, I just checked again by not using AA. The 4k is crisp as it possibly can be. The upscalled 1080 image is still blurry. And obviously less details are being shown.

1080 upscaled no AA

http://www.pic-upload.de/view-31680389/20160912_124137.jpg.html

4k no AA

http://www.pic-upload.de/view-31680399/20160912_124225.jpg.html

By what I mean in regards to "depends on panel" is that some TV's have such poor Brightness and Colour calibration that resolution is less of a factor in the overall presentation of an image. (Aka. Resolution isn't everything.)

Secondly some TV's have scalers of questionable quality that may add noise or artifacts into the displayed image, in some more moderate scenario's you might get additional input lag.

Thirdly, some TV's will also do some post-processing on the displayed image to bolster contrast, sharpness, blur, or perhaps create an additional frame between two frames to simulate a higher refresh rate.

Then lastly there is a massive factor of panel size and viewing distance you need to factor in, there is a reason why PC gamers like the "smaller" more expensive details in games... Because we are also some of the first to pick up and notice them due to how close we sit to our displays.

I'm not disputing the fact that native content is superior though, but there is more to this issue than people actually realise.

Those pics are taken on a Monitor. Not a TV :) There is no post processing of the image.



Intel Core i7 8700K | 32 GB DDR 4 PC 3200 | ROG STRIX Z370-F Gaming | RTX 3090 FE| Crappy Monitor| HTC Vive Pro :3