There was a lot of talk about adjusting convergence here. I agree that having the correct convergence will reduce eyestrain considerably. Most games without a fix do not have a good convergence setting and that can lead to eyestrain.
Other than the f5 and f6 I did not see the other important part of adjusting convergence. If they just hit those keys nothing will happen!
First you must go to nvidia control panel > Set keyboard shortcuts > Show advanced settings > check box for-> enable advanced ingame settings.
Now you can adjust convergence with control f5 and ctrl f6 (which helps pop out by correcting the left/right eye distance or alignment)
There was a lot of talk about adjusting convergence here. I agree that having the correct convergence will reduce eyestrain considerably. Most games without a fix do not have a good convergence setting and that can lead to eyestrain.
Other than the f5 and f6 I did not see the other important part of adjusting convergence. If they just hit those keys nothing will happen!
First you must go to nvidia control panel > Set keyboard shortcuts > Show advanced settings > check box for-> enable advanced ingame settings.
Now you can adjust convergence with control f5 and ctrl f6 (which helps pop out by correcting the left/right eye distance or alignment)
NZXT Noctis 450. Asus ROG Formula VIII, 6700k, NZXT Kracken x61. Avexir Core DDR4 (Red) 16g. Windows 10. Samsung Evo 1T & 2T SSD. Asus Strix 2080 ti. EVGA 1300w Modular Gold PSU.
Asus ROG Swift PG278Q Monitor: 1440p 3D Vision
As many others said, training is the key, unless 60Hz flickering is what annoys you. Last year, when I bought my monitor and 3DV2 kit, I started between 50% and 60% depth, and once I learned to focus on different distances I increased it to 100% right away without any problems.
Right now, if I try 50% depth it looks fake for me, too flat. Testing with Dolphin, which lets you override the depth limits, my eyes can endure up to 125% depth. More than that and I can't focus on the infinite plane.
As a fun fact, my mother tried 3D Vision 2 for the first time with Tomb Raider. She started right away with 100% depth without a single problem or complaint! Meanwhile, my brother, who started playing video games when he was a baby (just like me), can't focus correctly and says he sees double image.
I guess my brother is so used to 2D gaming that he can't order his eyes to focus on things that aren't at screen depth. He needs more training, but he doesn't want to do it because he's sensitive to flickering (well, he also almost never uses 3D on the 3DS, which doesn0t flicker).
In conclusion, every person is different. Maybe you feel sick precisely because you use too little depth and it looks very unrealistic.
As many others said, training is the key, unless 60Hz flickering is what annoys you. Last year, when I bought my monitor and 3DV2 kit, I started between 50% and 60% depth, and once I learned to focus on different distances I increased it to 100% right away without any problems.
Right now, if I try 50% depth it looks fake for me, too flat. Testing with Dolphin, which lets you override the depth limits, my eyes can endure up to 125% depth. More than that and I can't focus on the infinite plane.
As a fun fact, my mother tried 3D Vision 2 for the first time with Tomb Raider. She started right away with 100% depth without a single problem or complaint! Meanwhile, my brother, who started playing video games when he was a baby (just like me), can't focus correctly and says he sees double image.
I guess my brother is so used to 2D gaming that he can't order his eyes to focus on things that aren't at screen depth. He needs more training, but he doesn't want to do it because he's sensitive to flickering (well, he also almost never uses 3D on the 3DS, which doesn0t flicker).
In conclusion, every person is different. Maybe you feel sick precisely because you use too little depth and it looks very unrealistic.
Other than the f5 and f6 I did not see the other important part of adjusting convergence. If they just hit those keys nothing will happen!
First you must go to nvidia control panel > Set keyboard shortcuts > Show advanced settings > check box for-> enable advanced ingame settings.
Now you can adjust convergence with control f5 and ctrl f6 (which helps pop out by correcting the left/right eye distance or alignment)
NZXT Noctis 450. Asus ROG Formula VIII, 6700k, NZXT Kracken x61. Avexir Core DDR4 (Red) 16g. Windows 10. Samsung Evo 1T & 2T SSD. Asus Strix 2080 ti. EVGA 1300w Modular Gold PSU.
Asus ROG Swift PG278Q Monitor: 1440p 3D Vision
Right now, if I try 50% depth it looks fake for me, too flat. Testing with Dolphin, which lets you override the depth limits, my eyes can endure up to 125% depth. More than that and I can't focus on the infinite plane.
As a fun fact, my mother tried 3D Vision 2 for the first time with Tomb Raider. She started right away with 100% depth without a single problem or complaint! Meanwhile, my brother, who started playing video games when he was a baby (just like me), can't focus correctly and says he sees double image.
I guess my brother is so used to 2D gaming that he can't order his eyes to focus on things that aren't at screen depth. He needs more training, but he doesn't want to do it because he's sensitive to flickering (well, he also almost never uses 3D on the 3DS, which doesn0t flicker).
In conclusion, every person is different. Maybe you feel sick precisely because you use too little depth and it looks very unrealistic.
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