tsaescishoeshiner wrote: »In my experience, you need at least a 50" screen in order to break free properly in Cyrodiil
I few people have mentioned a curved screen. When I switched to a curved screen it helped to cut down on eye strain. If you are the proper distance from it your eyes don't have to refocus going from center to edge.
Mariusghost84 wrote: »Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »SpiritofESO wrote: »I am on PS4 console so I have a super-comfy faux leather recliner which I drag over to the 55-inch screen and with the leg-rest up my feet are about 18 inches away from the screen!!! It is like I am INSIDE the game and I love it.
Sorry -- I cannot ever go back to playing on computer unless you are playing on a computer with a HUGE monitor.
I am feeling that playing MMOs on computer is just so ... Y2K. Not dead yet but definitely moribund.
@SpiritofESO
LMAO. MMOs on PC arent dying.
You want immersion, high resolution and a curved ultra wide blows a large flatscreen out of the ballpark. Good luck with that on console. I have gamed on huge TVs, projectors, computer monitors big and small, 3 computer monitors in an eyefinity setup, and for the last few years on various curved ultra wides. If immersion is your goal, there is simply no comparison. The only thing more immersive is VR, but that is a different animal all together.
Would you say that Samsungs new g9 would give that level of immersion? Wouldnt picture be kinda streched out?
Can easy imagine ultra wide monitors being very nice here, now for FPS I imagine they would be an world changer but even in ESO it will be nice.precambria wrote: »I have a wide aspect monitor that I play this game with and you actually do get to see more of what is going on, it is useful in PvP but the problem is most people don't have one so if you decide to not push into a sandwhich between two teams because you can see them and your team can't it will be a lonely time. Sometimes when I am yelling "are you BLIND" at my monitor when team is basically primordial ooze level of awareness, I need to remember they might not actually be able to see what I can see clear as day because of monitor.
Yes the point about horse blinders, benefit is that you get much more side vision, and even if you don't focus there your eyes spot movement, well if its past the edge of the screen you don't see it at all.Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »Can easy imagine ultra wide monitors being very nice here, now for FPS I imagine they would be an world changer but even in ESO it will be nice.precambria wrote: »I have a wide aspect monitor that I play this game with and you actually do get to see more of what is going on, it is useful in PvP but the problem is most people don't have one so if you decide to not push into a sandwhich between two teams because you can see them and your team can't it will be a lonely time. Sometimes when I am yelling "are you BLIND" at my monitor when team is basically primordial ooze level of awareness, I need to remember they might not actually be able to see what I can see clear as day because of monitor.
@zaria
They are great in shooters IMO. Going to an ultrawide is like wearing horse blinders your whole gaming life, and then taking them off.
I think most of the really competitive players will opt for a 4k vs an ultrawide in first person shooters. 4Ks actually have slightly more horizantal real estate (more vertical as well), but it keeps everything in front of you (less eye movement). Less immersive, more total info on the screen because more pixels.
I like the ultrawide better for most titles because the curved nature is more immersive as it engages your peripheral vision. Also, because the total pixel density is actually lower than a 4k, you get a better frame rate all else being equal. It takes less horespower to drive an ultrawide vs a 4k.
@precambria
Agreed on the eye strain comments. But truthfully, the best thing to help eye strain is stable FPS (Frames Per Second). They dont need to be super high, they just need to be consistent and in sync with your monitors refresh rate. That is why Gsync (needs enabled on both G card and monitor) is so freaking amazing. Historically, that is why V Sync was so important in the Game settings, but Gysnc takes that to a whole new level. I used to get really bad "gamer eye". My right eye would get totally bloodshot after a few hours. V Sync helped, G Sync eliminated it.
I play with 3D vision. Nothing you're discussing comes close.
Yes the point about horse blinders, benefit is that you get much more side vision, and even if you don't focus there your eyes spot movement, well if its past the edge of the screen you don't see it at all.Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »Can easy imagine ultra wide monitors being very nice here, now for FPS I imagine they would be an world changer but even in ESO it will be nice.precambria wrote: »I have a wide aspect monitor that I play this game with and you actually do get to see more of what is going on, it is useful in PvP but the problem is most people don't have one so if you decide to not push into a sandwhich between two teams because you can see them and your team can't it will be a lonely time. Sometimes when I am yelling "are you BLIND" at my monitor when team is basically primordial ooze level of awareness, I need to remember they might not actually be able to see what I can see clear as day because of monitor.
@zaria
They are great in shooters IMO. Going to an ultrawide is like wearing horse blinders your whole gaming life, and then taking them off.
I think most of the really competitive players will opt for a 4k vs an ultrawide in first person shooters. 4Ks actually have slightly more horizantal real estate (more vertical as well), but it keeps everything in front of you (less eye movement). Less immersive, more total info on the screen because more pixels.
I like the ultrawide better for most titles because the curved nature is more immersive as it engages your peripheral vision. Also, because the total pixel density is actually lower than a 4k, you get a better frame rate all else being equal. It takes less horespower to drive an ultrawide vs a 4k.
@precambria
Agreed on the eye strain comments. But truthfully, the best thing to help eye strain is stable FPS (Frames Per Second). They dont need to be super high, they just need to be consistent and in sync with your monitors refresh rate. That is why Gsync (needs enabled on both G card and monitor) is so freaking amazing. Historically, that is why V Sync was so important in the Game settings, but Gysnc takes that to a whole new level. I used to get really bad "gamer eye". My right eye would get totally bloodshot after a few hours. V Sync helped, G Sync eliminated it.
Horizontal height is useful if you need to see up a lot, yes in urban combat it would be nice.
Now an 5120x1440 is pretty much an stretched 4K monitor, want one
Have to convince boss it will help at the work office.
Taleof2Cities wrote: »Screen size is likely near the bottom of your priorities, @Mariusghost84.
Having a good rig with a performance graphics card goes a long ways ... in addition to your internet provider and dialing things in through the ESO in-game video settings.
As a last resort, you can always return the monitor/TV for a refund if you don't like it (within the seller's guidelines) ... and try the other size.
Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »I gave a 3D monitor a try. It was really cool, but personally, it made me a bit nauseous. Totally agree that if immersion is your goal, its a neat option, but I dont think it is the most accurate in terms of being able to quickly perceive the info on your screen. Just my personal experience.
tsaescishoeshiner wrote: »In my experience, you need at least a 50" screen in order to break free properly in Cyrodiil
In Cyrodiil you need a second monitor just for your loading screens.......
Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »I gave a 3D monitor a try. It was really cool, but personally, it made me a bit nauseous. Totally agree that if immersion is your goal, its a neat option, but I dont think it is the most accurate in terms of being able to quickly perceive the info on your screen. Just my personal experience.
I've no experience with 3D monitors, but I've got a stereo camera with a 3D display and that's not really great. The image seems to shimmer and changes a lot when your head moves relative to the screen. It would make me nauseous to play on something like that.
I use 3D shutter glasses though and if anything I can play a lot longer without adverse effects. It's not nearly as sensitive to head movement. In fact, the 'natural' perception of depth causes a lot less eye strain and the fact each 'frame' is actually composed of 2 frames capturing the same scene from slightly different angles makes the image appear a lot sharper.
With the horrible population imbalance the size of the screen needed depends on the faction you join.
For DC you will need a 100" screen just to see another player.
For AD a smaller screen of around 60" should do.
For EP, because they always have like 1000 players at any given time, a 10" screen would be plenty.
Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »I gave a 3D monitor a try. It was really cool, but personally, it made me a bit nauseous. Totally agree that if immersion is your goal, its a neat option, but I dont think it is the most accurate in terms of being able to quickly perceive the info on your screen. Just my personal experience.
I've no experience with 3D monitors, but I've got a stereo camera with a 3D display and that's not really great. The image seems to shimmer and changes a lot when your head moves relative to the screen. It would make me nauseous to play on something like that.
I use 3D shutter glasses though and if anything I can play a lot longer without adverse effects. It's not nearly as sensitive to head movement. In fact, the 'natural' perception of depth causes a lot less eye strain and the fact each 'frame' is actually composed of 2 frames capturing the same scene from slightly different angles makes the image appear a lot sharper.
@Muizer
The 3D monitor I was describing used shutter style glasses. I had both a samsung TV and monitor that used them. Admittedly, they were back when the tech was pretty young. It never quite looked right to me. Buy hey, to each their own. There is no right answer. If you like it, awesome.
Honestly the only thing I ever really enjoyed in 3D was watching Golf and XGames. They did the masters one year with 3D cameras and it was AWESOME. Even in a new blockbuster film, I prefer non-3D (but that might be because thats what the wife prefers, and well, she is always right).With the horrible population imbalance the size of the screen needed depends on the faction you join.
For DC you will need a 100" screen just to see another player.
For AD a smaller screen of around 60" should do.
For EP, because they always have like 1000 players at any given time, a 10" screen would be plenty.
@Kagukan
Bad jokes and EP bashing aside, you do realize what you said is nonsense right. Monitor size does not increase field of view. Monitor resolution does. You will see more of the battlefield with a 27inch 4k monitor than you will with a 100inch 1080p monitor. That is the whole point. Screen size is irrelevant to field of view, which means its irrelevant to performance (frame rate).
man i got a 2070s super and 3700x and everything but i drop to 40 fps after any fight gets big on low graphics settings. Just go for the big monitor the games performance sucks