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Yer you definitely fucked your brain if it's impacted your movie viewing experience that much.

Every time I get a new TV I turn all that shit off relating to higher motion, so that you get the cinematic experience not the I am in the room with them experience, or for those aussies on the site the home and away experience (just looks like a cheap TV show). The only time I turn it all on is when watching sport.

Would jump right on the "I am in the room with them" experience. But The AR/VR tech is not there yet and it would probably take a lot of effort to create a film that supports that level of immersion .

Some prefer the raspier sound of a vinyl record to the sound of a CD. I see viewing content in low fps as a similar example. 

On older TVs the picture response time was not as fast as today. The response time lag made movies watched at home look smoother without any frame insertion tricks. OLED panels in particular are very fast in updating the picture based on the input making it more obvious that there are singular still pictures beside each other instead of moving objects. I blame the older TVs for my fucked brain, and the black levels of modern panels for my feeling of watching something grey in the cinema.