Gooberlx2
Lifer
- May 4, 2001
- 15,381
- 6
- 91
Originally posted by: JE78
I was told a while back that the human eye can't notice anything better than 29 FPS. But anything above 50 and i'm happy as long as is consistant. When I play BF2 I always get these spikes that drop my FPS to like 25, then right back to 70. I'm sure its a RAM issue since BF2 is memory hog.
Not true. Notice the difference in how a movie "looks" compared to how a soap opera or home video "looks". Aside from post processing and studio magic, the fluidity has to do with FPS. Movies are 24fps, home videos are much higher (50-or-so I think). I think the human eye can see as high as 100fps in some people. It also depends on the part of the eye. The periferal fringes can see a higher frame rate than the center of your eye (probably to make up for their inability to make out details). Some people get headaches watching movies on the big screen because they can see the flicker out of the corners of their eyes (I can), versus when they look at it straight on. This is why I HATE sitting anywhere but center.
My sweet spot for FPS gaming is in the 60s average...that looks good enough to me. Too bad I never have fast enough hardware to pull it off for current games at any given time.