Hi,
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Anywhere On The Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include An Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link In THe Menu Of The TaskBar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
Hi,
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Nowhere On My Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include A Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link To Game In The Menu Of The Taskbar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
[quote="watnow"]Hi,
... ... ... What Is The Built-In GPU...? And What Is The GPU In CPU...? Is CPU The CPU Of The Laptop...?
So, Is There Any Way To Fix This Problem...?
Is There Any Downloadable Patch To Fix This...? If So, Can You Send Link...?[/quote]Some CPUs have a little GPU built-in to them. It's sometimes called an i-GPU or integrated GPU. They are weak, and can do basic graphics things, but are pretty useless for games.
For real gaming, you generally want a proper external GPU. If you follow leopard_jumps' instructions, it might help to force Crysis 2 to use your external GPU instead of the iGPU.
watnow said:Hi,
... ... ... What Is The Built-In GPU...? And What Is The GPU In CPU...? Is CPU The CPU Of The Laptop...?
So, Is There Any Way To Fix This Problem...?
Is There Any Downloadable Patch To Fix This...? If So, Can You Send Link...?
Some CPUs have a little GPU built-in to them. It's sometimes called an i-GPU or integrated GPU. They are weak, and can do basic graphics things, but are pretty useless for games.
For real gaming, you generally want a proper external GPU. If you follow leopard_jumps' instructions, it might help to force Crysis 2 to use your external GPU instead of the iGPU.
Hi,
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Nowhere On My Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include A Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link To Game In The Menu Of The Taskbar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
Or Will Right Click The Link In Taskbar Be Any Use...?
Guys, could you please give a link where i can learn about this "fake" 3D (1 frame rendering method)?
I know about this sh1t for long time, but i never fully understand it. I want to realise why do developers prefer it over the normal stereo 3D (with convergence)
Guys, could you please give a link where i can learn about this "fake" 3D (1 frame rendering method)?
I know about this sh1t for long time, but i never fully understand it. I want to realise why do developers prefer it over the normal stereo 3D (with convergence)
Ksyon
Developers don't care about anything, apart from getting money for their game, with as little effort as possible. Just like any business.
And since there is a too small 3D Vision userbase to dictate any business decisions, 3D is almost never implemented in games. It costs more to do it, than not to do it.
Fake 3D was an addition to the nVidia driver done by nVidia to at least allow gamers to have some sort of 3D effect, when games were so badly developed with regards to 3D that they were unplayable. From a mere physical point of view. Like, your eyes hurt, a lot :-)
(So probably it was a move recommended by their legal department LOL)
PS
In case I misunderstood you and you were referring specifically to Crysis 2 + 3 type of fake/z-buffer 3D (rather than the newish driver addition), then the answer is that developers want to keep a good frame rate, and Stereo 3D with convergence has a much bigger impact on processing power.
Ksyon
Developers don't care about anything, apart from getting money for their game, with as little effort as possible. Just like any business.
And since there is a too small 3D Vision userbase to dictate any business decisions, 3D is almost never implemented in games. It costs more to do it, than not to do it.
Fake 3D was an addition to the nVidia driver done by nVidia to at least allow gamers to have some sort of 3D effect, when games were so badly developed with regards to 3D that they were unplayable. From a mere physical point of view. Like, your eyes hurt, a lot :-)
(So probably it was a move recommended by their legal department LOL)
PS
In case I misunderstood you and you were referring specifically to Crysis 2 + 3 type of fake/z-buffer 3D (rather than the newish driver addition), then the answer is that developers want to keep a good frame rate, and Stereo 3D with convergence has a much bigger impact on processing power.
There's a few good threads on it ... or that evolved into it(most Crysis 2/3 threads) :)
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/573166/?comment=3923794
Thanks guys, i'll get into it.
Zappologist, i meant some technical details of this method. The reasons, why developers use it are clear for me and i fully undertand motives of this greedy and tricky bastards =)
Thanks guys, i'll get into it.
Zappologist, i meant some technical details of this method. The reasons, why developers use it are clear for me and i fully undertand motives of this greedy and tricky bastards =)
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Anywhere On The Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include An Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link In THe Menu Of The TaskBar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Nowhere On My Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include A Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link To Game In The Menu Of The Taskbar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
For real gaming, you generally want a proper external GPU. If you follow leopard_jumps' instructions, it might help to force Crysis 2 to use your external GPU instead of the iGPU.
... ... ... I Don't See The Game Icon Nowhere On My Desktop... Must Be During Installation, The Install Wizard Didn't Include A Desktop Icon...
All I'm Able To Find Is The Link To Game In The Menu Of The Taskbar...
Can You Elaborate More And See If You Know Another Way...?
Or Will Right Click The Link In Taskbar Be Any Use...?
46" Samsung ES7500 3DTV (checkerboard, high FOV as desktop monitor, highly recommend!) - Metro 2033 3D PNG screens - Metro LL filter realism mod - Flugan's Deus Ex:HR Depth changers - Nvidia tech support online form - Nvidia support: 1-800-797-6530
[MonitorSizeOverride][Global/Base Profile Tweaks][Depth=IPD]
I know about this sh1t for long time, but i never fully understand it. I want to realise why do developers prefer it over the normal stereo 3D (with convergence)
Developers don't care about anything, apart from getting money for their game, with as little effort as possible. Just like any business.
And since there is a too small 3D Vision userbase to dictate any business decisions, 3D is almost never implemented in games. It costs more to do it, than not to do it.
Fake 3D was an addition to the nVidia driver done by nVidia to at least allow gamers to have some sort of 3D effect, when games were so badly developed with regards to 3D that they were unplayable. From a mere physical point of view. Like, your eyes hurt, a lot :-)
(So probably it was a move recommended by their legal department LOL)
PS
In case I misunderstood you and you were referring specifically to Crysis 2 + 3 type of fake/z-buffer 3D (rather than the newish driver addition), then the answer is that developers want to keep a good frame rate, and Stereo 3D with convergence has a much bigger impact on processing power.
https://forums.geforce.com/default/topic/573166/?comment=3923794
[MonitorSizeOverride][Global/Base Profile Tweaks][Depth=IPD]
Zappologist, i meant some technical details of this method. The reasons, why developers use it are clear for me and i fully undertand motives of this greedy and tricky bastards =)