![]() Since about 7 years many TVs (especially SONY) implement BFI and BLS interpolation with a minumum impact on input-lag (previously, these kind of interpolation add quite some lag). They altern fuild moments to some stutters, add visual artifacts and input-lag. Being in real-time, those algoritms can't be very precise. That kind of interpolation you mentioned isn't something good for games (and any other material also if you ask me). Btw I brought some supporting arguments (about the fact that interlaced material is perfectly reproduced on CRT-so to avoid GSM issues, about black/contrast, colors, motion resolution, etc.) for what I was saying, since you don't agree, why you didn't quoted me for elaborate on them?Ĭlick to expand.Indeed, on HD digital panels, SD resolution is not only blurred but also colors are washed out (more or less depending on the scaler's quality, but it's always definitely visible, especially on precise signals like videogames) for the same reason. I can make direct comparisons every day, I'm not basing any judment on memories. I have different kind of CRTs (some SD TV ones, a HD one, a couple good monitors), LCDs (a very good VA TV and a IPS QHD monitor my sister bought for photography), I have also a friend with a top Plasma Tv and another with a 4k HDR Oled. I don't have any reason for telling that the Ps2 (og hw) picture quality is better on CRT than LCD, aside that's simply the truth. I hope I managed to make things clearer about my point also. I simply know that in many countries (like here in Italy) you can remedy top notch CRTs for nothing (many people almost pay you for retiring them.).Īnyway, I perfectly understand your point. I don't even know if he lives in a country where SCART input is present on TVs. I was answering to some of his questions, since he said that GSM often mess up things on screen or makes some games to not even boot. If he want or not to get another TV, is his choice I think. Well, there' isn't any CRT manufacturer that gives me a bribe for advertising them It's possible that you wasn't using a component cable, but the composite cable bundled with playstations?Ĥ0" is generally too much for a consumer SD CRT Tv (better to remain under 30"), likely it also had visible alignment problems. I'm just sorry I can't show you these things from live/in person. You can ask me everything you want about TV picture quality. ![]() Now if you don't agree on something, let's elaborate on those observations. Connecting the Ps2 to it with a Scart-RGB cable gives a much sharper picture than any LCD.Īnd I'm talking about a still picture, 'cause to compare them in motion isn't even a thing. ![]() I'm now in front of a Mivar 28S4 stereo, we paid about 300$ for it in 2001. I think you already guessed I'm not talking about those kind of subtleties). You don't need any kind of specific tv (there's no need of a PVM/BVM-monitor, lol. rising contrast too much can worsen the focus on CRT TVs). If you get blurred textures on CRT it's for either, bad convergence, bad focus, bad cable/signal (i.e. I'm pretty sure we share a very similar conception of what picture quality means. Btw I brought some supporting arguments (about the fact that interlaced material is perfectly reproduced on CRT-so to avoid GSM issues, about black/contrast, colors, motion resolution, etc.) for what I was saying, since you don't agree, why you didn't quoted me for elaborate on them?Īs you, I don't like blurred textures (that's the reason I putted aside the full-hd LCD for a HD CRT.), neither scanlines. This is the quickest way in manner of games (especially those ugly ones with thousands of files or million patches p).Ĭlick to expand.I see. Quicker for You will be keeping PS3 data unpacked, transfer it on demand via FTP and rebuilding database after You finished. Additionally, PS3 is very slow in unpacking a lot of files from PKGs. Because they are compressed and often data inside is already compressed by game developer. Other options are poor user experience.Īd9. If You want best experience with PS2 games, play on PS2 or on PC using PCSX2. Possible for sure but no one hack it i that way.Īd8. ECM is a disc compression format (poor today, better is CISO (PCSX2 support it similar to the one designed for PSP)) and of course CHD (but none of the PS2 emulators known to me support it). None of PS2 games published on CD was CDDA (audio tracks).Īd3b. Probably only debug colours displaying in "disco" version.Īd3a.
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