There are plenty of tvs with 120hz, and some with 240hz rrs. Obviously they arent as cheap as 60hz.
Your blanket statement is incorrect.
Also not true, response times for tvs are generally much slower. Not a huge deal in non competitive instances, but is a selling point to some,so the higher frame rate is not the only +.
no way! the game runs great on a 2k ā¬ graphic card? /pikachuface
btw.
a lot of players and streamers had problems with the 3080(ti) and Diablo IV. b ut its probably more a problem of the card or nvidia driver and not D4.
Sure, not the cheap ones like yours. 4k/120. And 4k/240 tvs exist smart guy. You just have to be intelligent enough to know what you are looking for and buying.
And yes, thats exactly how refresh rates work. You can āseeā a true 240 fps on a 4k/240.
For those with melting 3080Tiās, this is an excuse to get your cards on a custom water cooled loop! Bust out those credit cards and join the liquid cooled master race
Running a 3060 12GB.
Gen 7 intel i5.
32GB
NVMe drive.
1080P 60FPS, smooth as butter. And no, the fans only run occasionally just as they do when Iām not playing games. The card simply doesnāt heat up. I know I could turn the graphics up more and find a balance, but I chose not to. The quality of the graphics was not my focus during beta.
My laptop with the 11th gen i5 plays at a higher quality setting and still turns 60FPS fairly smooth. It has 32GB of memory and a 3050Ti with 4GB, and a high performance NVMe.
From what I have been seeing on the forums, it seems like the high end cards are having issues. 3080 and up, 4070 and up, etc.
As a comparison, I normally run D3 at FPS of 60, as I just donāt need high FPS on a diablo game.
But Overwatch, I will run at 144FPS. And this system does that game just fine too.
So I donāt know. I will say that I have to run much lower settings than you do. But I think the graphic optimization at high settings and especially on more powerful cards are simply borked right now.
I would argue that no game could melt your GPU unless it is altering or overriding drivers or settings, which I imagine no app developer would risk doing out of liability, a game may not be optimized and utilizing the GPU more than it needs to, but the BIOS / drivers / OC settings or hardware are whatās melting your GPU.
Some cards today are coded badly on the 0 RPM, and tend to not kick in properly, download the app for MSI or ASUS or whatever your card is and remove the 0 RPM setting and let the card ramp up if it needs to, or make a fan curve for it that will ramp up in a proper way based on the graphical load on it.
Iāve had similar issues, where the card get bricked due to the 0 RPM setting fudging me over and my PC just shuts down and restarts midgame.
Uhhh, I have a shoddy Scepter model from 2010 wit three lines of dead pixels in it. I originally got it for my Xbox One for the release of Doom Eternal and Cyberpunk 2077. It was sold (the Xbox) with no side panels, or controller sync switch, and as āFor Parts Onlyā for $20. It actually worked just fine. Everythang I got is jank like that.
Soā¦ If I were to invest in a new television, I should cap my frame rates on ALL games at 60 fps? And instead focus on upping image quality?
I had one hard crash. The computer crashed and I had this blue screen, and it started to download something. Never seen that before, and I have no clue what it meant.
Worked fine after that, but I did cap my fps to 75.