High Definition PC Gaming

Raikiri said:
There have been monitors available that would do over that for years now, way before TFTs were commonplace.

In a way its the rush from everyone to get a TFT and dump CRTs that has held back hi-res gaming .

If people had been prepared to put up with their 24"+ hot heavy bulky CRTs on their desk then we would have been gaming at 2048x1536+ ages ago.

The disadvantages of large CRTs and the cost of hi-res TFT panels kind of meant a step back in the race to increase resolution .
 
xolotl said:
Not really, 1080 is 1920x1080 resolution. So, unless you're using a 23 or 24 inch panel you really haven't been playing in full HD.
True, same can be said for quite a few console users. How many TV panels are a 1920x1080 native? Lots of the cheaper/common ones downscale to 1366 x 768 or there abouts.
 
amount 1080p games on console....oh about 3 or 4 fairly rubbish ones. Cost of a 1080p cabable tv? astronomical.

pc gaming still is the no 1 platform of choice for gaming as you can get a tv cabable of higher res's than 1080p for about £400 and there are 100's of games supported.
 
HD is nothing to do with the total resolution, its to do with the density. IE 800x600 on a 32" tele would look awful, however 800x600 on a 2" eyepiece would be considered mega HD.

The native resolution of a tft monitor is, give or take, HD.
 
Had to be done sorry.

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titchard said:
The next step up is 4 X HD (Ultra HD or something - The Japanese already have it, having thrown us normal HDTV after they had used it :p)

Rich


Woot i was right for once in my life even though it was the most vaguest answer. :D :p
 
Zefan said:
Yes I know, but that was before games supported that resolution.

Remember people we're talking about games here.

I disagree.

Even in the 90s it was possible to run games in resolutions > 1920x1080 on screens smaller than 23" (e.g. 21" CRT).
Well coded games (those that either queried available resolutions from the driver, or allowed custom resolutions) had the support.
 
titchard said:
The next step up is 4 X HD (Ultra HD or something - The Japanese already have it, having thrown us normal HDTV after they had used it :p)

Rich

What're you talking about they have it? You mean in their homes? Afaik it's only used for medical and scientific research. Oh yeah, and it's QuadHD btw.
 
Streeteh said:
HD is nothing to do with the total resolution, its to do with the density. IE 800x600 on a 32" tele would look awful, however 800x600 on a 2" eyepiece would be considered mega HD.

The native resolution of a tft monitor is, give or take, HD.


HD in this context stands for High Definition. 720p is HD, whether its on a 15" lcd or a 30ft projected image. its nothing to do with density.
 
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james.miller said:
HD in this context stands for Hight Definition. 720p is HD, whether its on a 15" lcd or a 30ft projected image. its nothing to do with density.

High Definition by... definition means a high level of detail. The density of the pixels determines the definition, not the resolution.

720p on a 60" screen would be anything but HD, infact it would look terrible, the terms 720p etc are just the way in which manufacturers have standardized the resolutions.
 
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