My guess is your TV isn't 1080p native, so when you play at 1080p, the TV tries to "cram" multiple game pixels into 1 TV pixel, producing the jagginess that you see.įrom my understanding, most TVs under 32" run at 720p native because 1080p native would be too many pixels to fit on such a small screen.įorgive me if what I said has already been stated - I didn't read though every single post on this thread.How is 1080p too many pixels for less than 32". I know there is huge amount of settings but it`s worth to adjust them, If anything it`d be more logic that a 1080p designed game would look worse on 720p not reverse. And the reason could also be an ingame field of depth effect which is turned on by default. However if you own 1080p, play V on 1080p if you want the best out of it.Īll these issues some of you describe have nothing to do with resolution but simple TV/Console/game settings of sharpness, bright and contrast. Well i ain`t gonna argue with this since i`m not an expert for these things but i know i`ve noticed a huge improvement when i bought better HDMI cable so it looks like it does some diference. You shouldn't need to spend any where near $60. With a cheap 50 foot cable you may signal get drop outs for several reason, but that is not lag & nothing to do with gold connectors. The signal still travels in hundred millionths of a second. No, you would not notice any latency from a HDMI cable gold plated or not. The best cable is of course the one you get along with PS4 but since it was too short for me i had to invest 60€ in high speed cable. The sound was 50% better and the input lag was almost non-existant. However i have big TV so i needed a long cable and in my case the diference between cheap noname cable and expensive one was huge. You wont notice much diference between cheap and expensive cable with gold conectors if it`s shorter than 2m. In that case you need high speed cable otherwise the input lag and sound will sucks. While those expensive HDMI cables are marketing moves, on the other hand you notice a diference.īut that diference is noticeable when the cable is longer than 3m. Said the marketing dude with the "double insulated gold contact extra performance" HDMI cable he wanted to sell to you? Input lag often comes due to unapropriate or cheap HDMI cable. Just make sure you note down how you have it set currently, so you can go back if you want. And in general check out the other settings, like, contrast or brightness could be too, & try turning off any advanced settings. For some TV's the correct calibration for sharpness isn't actually the lowest setting but actually closer to the middle. You might want to look into the sharpness setting again on your TV. ![]() The extra bit of blur helps to smooth it out and almost give it an anti-aliased look. I don't see quite the large amount of shimmering anymore on things in a distance. Now, I set my PS4 to 720p and yes, the image is a bit softer, but it's much easier on my eyes. I have the sharpness turned all the way down by the way, and it's still too sharp and the shimmering edges on everything is hard to bare sometimes. they just have that interlaced look you know? It's too sharp for my eyes. especially when things have to fade into view. You can see stuff in the background flickering and aliasing all over the place. Well, I have to say, GTA V looks better at 720p (to me) because 1080p just looks too sharp. ![]() why would you want to set your PS4 to 720p when the main focus is 1080p for PS4 games.
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