Watching a movie, BFG probably wouldn't be able to tell the difference. Doing office work on a CRT, he certainly would (the headache he'll get at 60fps/Hz would be a big hint). Playing games, he most likely would. I'm fairly certain this would apply to most people that have experienced gameplay at both 60 and 80fps.
Remember, there's a big difference between watching a movie on film and playing a 3D game. Film isn't interactive, so you won't notive the "lag" between input and response of low framerates. Film also captures motion blur, somewhat alleviating the perception of jerky motion at the low framerate of 24-30fps. But I can certainly notice the limits of film's low 24fps rate in fast-panning scenes. I'm guessing the only thing stopping Hollywood from switching to 60fps film cameras (which Sony has developed) is the almost-tripled cost of film, probably no small amount in a large film with lots of takes per scene.
Also, the main point of a higher average framerate is to maintain a higher minimum framerate. The guy at 60fps avg. may dip to 30fps regularly, whereas the guy at 80fps avg. may only dip to 45fps in intense firefights--a potentially big difference.
This topic was exhaustively debated before, though, so there's really no point in some of us debunking this 60Hz myth for the fifth time. Three times in a month, in fact:
Theory of the framerate that is smooth to the eye.
Updated Theory of Smooth Frame Rate
Whats the highest framerate that the human eye can detect?
Note that VIAN's initial title is somewhat misleading, as 3D gaming framerates need to be smooth to your brain, not your eye. It's all about perception, and the smaller the delay between what happens and what you see, and then how you react and how your in-game persona reacts is key, and more easily noticed when playing than when watching. You probably won't notice jerkiness at above ~20fps just
watching a game, but you'll certainly notice the delay between your mouse input and the on-screen response at lower fps while
playing.
If you order now, I'll throw in these two more recent threads ... FOR FREE!
Advantages of high FPS.
Refresh rate and Frames per Second
Now, let's never speak of this again, or at least get an admin to post this linkfest to those gabfests as a signpost for future skeptics.
