5/17/2023 0 Comments Switchresx 50hz 1680x1050You'll need to move up to a 970 to make that happen. You will *not* be able to run with a GTX 960 at high quality settings and get 50+ FPS at 1080p. It's a subjective question what is "noticeable." I'm a graphics snob, so I notice minute details down to leaves in trees and texture quality of a road in a sim racing game. As the other person said, your eye may notice more, or less, than someone else. Is it noticeable? Yes, but again, it's not a big jump. No, there is not a big difference in graphics quality. What settings i should do to get 50+fps in the division and the best resolution for my PC?but please i want to playthe division on high qualityĪs one who has plenty of gaming time in the past on both resolutions, I thought I answered your questions which included a link on that game's performance settings per resolution. Is there a big difference in graphics and details on between 1050p and 1080p? Looks like you'd need to scale back quality to medium to get 50+ FPS at 1080p, which may look worse than 1050p with higher quality settings: Regarding The Division, here's a guide that you can use to give you an idea of what to expect. At 1440p the games I play today average between 2GB-3.2GB VRAM of allocation requirement (Witcher 3, Crysis 3, Far Cry 4, Star Wars Battlefront, BF4, Project Cars, DiRT Rally). One thing to keep in mind however: moving up in resolution also requires more VRAM from the card, and today even at 1080p newer games are approaching 2GB VRAM (or more) in allocation use. ![]() This move to 1080p was when I was running a GTX 275 GPU which is roughly today's 970 for that time. In fact, it was very minimal if I remember correctly (like >10%). Also, the FPS hit wasn't near as bad from 1050p->1080p compared to 1080p->1440p. ![]() With that said, it wasn't the stunning in graphics improvement I had expected, certainly not anything like the very noticeable difference going from 1080p to 1440p. All that means is that there are more lines of vertical resolution. Both of these are 16:10 monitors, not 16:9 as 1080p monitors/HDTVs are. I played Crysis 1 on it and later got a 24" Dell 1920x1200. I still have a 22" Samsung 1680x1050 monitor originally bought in 2007.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |