Just a heads up in case you don't know. NVidia released drivers yesterday that allow you to turn GSynch on if you have a Freesynch monitor. They currently only officially support 12 monitors that they tested, but you can still turn it on manually if it's not on the list. I tried it yesterday with my AOC monitor and it worked pretty much perfectly when playing PUBG. This is great news as the NVidia monitors were WAY more expensive since they had hardware built in to provide this feature. So download the drivers and give it a shot.
FYI if you aren't aware the short and non technical details are that it helps match up your monitor to the FPS of the game you are playing. If you have a game that wildly swings in FPS this should help smooth out the display so that you don't get tearing and stuttering.
Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
Moderators: Bakhtosh, EvilHomer3k
- Octavious
- Posts: 20035
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 2:50 pm
Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
Capitalism tries for a delicate balance: It attempts to work things out so that everyone gets just enough stuff to keep them from getting violent and trying to take other people’s stuff.
Shameless plug for my website: www.nettphoto.com
Shameless plug for my website: www.nettphoto.com
- jztemple2
- Posts: 11544
- Joined: Fri Feb 13, 2009 7:52 am
- Location: Brevard County, Florida, USA
Re: Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
That's something I could use on a few games (I'm looking at you, Ghost Recon Wildlands). It would seem that this was originally an AMD feature, is that right? I've found lists of FreeSynch monitors, but they mention AMD.
My father said that anything is interesting if you bother to read about it - Michael C. Harrold
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 82085
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
Re: Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
FreeSync is developed by AMD, but available royalty-free.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- jztemple2
- Posts: 11544
- Joined: Fri Feb 13, 2009 7:52 am
- Location: Brevard County, Florida, USA
Re: Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
It's a shame monitors are nigh-on indestructible, I'd have a hard time justifying spending money to replace mine which still works fine even at eleven years old.
My father said that anything is interesting if you bother to read about it - Michael C. Harrold
- GreenGoo
- Posts: 42239
- Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2004 10:46 pm
- Location: Ottawa, ON
Re: Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
There aren't going to be too many scenarios where someone owns an Nvidia card and a freesync monitor, bit with this support coming into play that may change.
An freesync monitor is significantly less than an equivalent g-sync one.
I'd want to see some serious 3rd party testing before I go all in on this pairing though.
Nvidia+g-sync has been significantly better performing than amd+freesync up until now, but the cost is prohibitive.
An freesync monitor is significantly less than an equivalent g-sync one.
I'd want to see some serious 3rd party testing before I go all in on this pairing though.
Nvidia+g-sync has been significantly better performing than amd+freesync up until now, but the cost is prohibitive.
- Carpet_pissr
- Posts: 19979
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 5:32 pm
- Location: Columbia, SC
Re: Gsynch Support Added For FreeSynch
This is huge. Not just that last part, but it also effectively allows you to play games at MUCH higher resolutions/refresh rates than you normally could with the same video card.Octavious wrote: ↑Wed Jan 16, 2019 9:44 amFYI if you aren't aware the short and non technical details are that it helps match up your monitor to the FPS of the game you are playing. If you have a game that wildly swings in FPS this should help smooth out the display so that you don't get tearing and stuttering.
i.e. if you are trying to run a modern game at a decent frame rate with even something like a GTX 1080 card (not a cheap card), on one of the larger monitors that can do 120Hz or even 144Hz natively (like this guy: https://slickdeals.net/f/12634252-lg-32 ... hBarV2_cat),
then you would be turning the graphics options in the game way, way down, or down-rezzing to one of the lower, non-native monitor resolutions, or significantly lowering the refresh rate, or all three. G-Sync (and to a lesser degree, FreeSync), solves this problem for the most part.
As mentioned though, up until now, the G-Sync monitors were MUCH more expensive than FreeSync due to licensing. I can't wait to see how much of a difference the lack of GSync hardware makes in monitors running Freesync.