3D vision is only fun for first few hours: Is it True?
I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
3D-gaming can cause eyestrain? It's true that excessive settings can cause eyestrain. Myself i game for hours without any problems and i use a 100" projectorsetup.
Ghosting: Seems to be a common problem with different hardwaresetups. Regarding 3d-vision i don't think it's because of the glasses, more about how well the monitor works with it. I don't have 3d-vision but i have an iz3d which also suffers a slight bit of this (new glasses on the way which shows great promise! /smile2.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':))' />. I also have a dual projector rig which is ghostingfree.
"It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower."
Yeah... gamedevelopers haven't written the games for 3d and yet they works so beautifully in 3d!! /wave.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':wave:' /> :P
Since the later versions of directx were released all objects in a game are usually rendered in a "volymetric space" and in 3d (3d-models). The stereodriver only catches the commands from the game and alter them a little bit which results in different views for each eye thus enabling you to see 3d.
Myself i use other drivers for both my monitor as well as the projectors (iz3d) and i can confirm some games and effects indeed has their flaws. A huge number of games works beautifully though!
Why games runs slower? The graphiccard is forced into rendering twice as much for each frame. I cannot tell about the nvidiadriver but regarding iz3d-driver the slowdown use to be some in between 5-40% measured in frames/second.
Nonethless: If you have the oppurtunity then give it a try. The immersion a properly setuped rig gives easily outshines any other effects regarding gaming.
3D-gaming can cause eyestrain? It's true that excessive settings can cause eyestrain. Myself i game for hours without any problems and i use a 100" projectorsetup.
Ghosting: Seems to be a common problem with different hardwaresetups. Regarding 3d-vision i don't think it's because of the glasses, more about how well the monitor works with it. I don't have 3d-vision but i have an iz3d which also suffers a slight bit of this (new glasses on the way which shows great promise! /smile2.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':))' />. I also have a dual projector rig which is ghostingfree.
"It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower."
Yeah... gamedevelopers haven't written the games for 3d and yet they works so beautifully in 3d!! /wave.gif' class='bbc_emoticon' alt=':wave:' /> :P
Since the later versions of directx were released all objects in a game are usually rendered in a "volymetric space" and in 3d (3d-models). The stereodriver only catches the commands from the game and alter them a little bit which results in different views for each eye thus enabling you to see 3d.
Myself i use other drivers for both my monitor as well as the projectors (iz3d) and i can confirm some games and effects indeed has their flaws. A huge number of games works beautifully though!
Why games runs slower? The graphiccard is forced into rendering twice as much for each frame. I cannot tell about the nvidiadriver but regarding iz3d-driver the slowdown use to be some in between 5-40% measured in frames/second.
Nonethless: If you have the oppurtunity then give it a try. The immersion a properly setuped rig gives easily outshines any other effects regarding gaming.
[quote name='angilina' post='533171' date='Apr 22 2009, 03:29 AM']I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc[/quote]
I've been an exlusive Stereo 3D gamers for the past 15 years and IMHO 3DVision is the best LCD glasses implemented for gamers todate, no eye strain even after hours of play, ghosting 'problem' is not affecting gameplay in most cases. Most likely the author had not been a S3D gamer until the time he tested the 3DVision unit and his experience with it may have been accordingly superficial.
[quote]It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?[/quote]
This "issue" is actually the hilight of Nvidia 3DVision package in particular and Nvidia graphic driver in general. By moving the solution to the driver, Nvidia single handedly removed the burden away from game developers, making virtual all modern games S3D. Being slower is inevitable regardless of where these extra polygons being pushed: from developer's end or Nvidia driver's end - IMO, the reviewer was giving redundant and irrelevant info here: seriously, the amount of polygons are double and what does he expect? Faster? Of course it has to get slower but that's always been the software/hardware development impetus: it has always been overcome with multitude of Nvidia graphic cards and/or in game graphic options.
[quote name='angilina' post='533171' date='Apr 22 2009, 03:29 AM']I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc
I've been an exlusive Stereo 3D gamers for the past 15 years and IMHO 3DVision is the best LCD glasses implemented for gamers todate, no eye strain even after hours of play, ghosting 'problem' is not affecting gameplay in most cases. Most likely the author had not been a S3D gamer until the time he tested the 3DVision unit and his experience with it may have been accordingly superficial.
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
This "issue" is actually the hilight of Nvidia 3DVision package in particular and Nvidia graphic driver in general. By moving the solution to the driver, Nvidia single handedly removed the burden away from game developers, making virtual all modern games S3D. Being slower is inevitable regardless of where these extra polygons being pushed: from developer's end or Nvidia driver's end - IMO, the reviewer was giving redundant and irrelevant info here: seriously, the amount of polygons are double and what does he expect? Faster? Of course it has to get slower but that's always been the software/hardware development impetus: it has always been overcome with multitude of Nvidia graphic cards and/or in game graphic options.
It's definitely wrong that 3D is fun for only few hours. Take my word, I was one of the first people to adopt GeForce 3D Vision as it launched, and I'm not new to 3D. I had used the eDimensional 3D glasses which was disappointing. However, the GeForce 3D vision is the best in PC 3D technology. I haven't played a single 2D game from the first day I hooked up my 3D system. Though it might sound funny, but I gotta tell you honestly that I get eye strain and headache if I play in flat 2D. I can't go back to 2D anymore. I always play in max depth setting, and I never experience eyestrain or headaches, and I play for hours everyday...games that range from intense action to simulation. I have tested at least 20 games and no complains. And even after months of use, everytime when I start playing a game, I get amazed with the beauty that it adds to the games. The ghosting is minimal, you won't even notice it when you are busy playing....and you can't find a product that's ghosting-free. This is the closest you can get. The guy who wrote in the review that 3D is fun only for a short time, probably needs to check his eyes with a doctor lol.
It's definitely wrong that 3D is fun for only few hours. Take my word, I was one of the first people to adopt GeForce 3D Vision as it launched, and I'm not new to 3D. I had used the eDimensional 3D glasses which was disappointing. However, the GeForce 3D vision is the best in PC 3D technology. I haven't played a single 2D game from the first day I hooked up my 3D system. Though it might sound funny, but I gotta tell you honestly that I get eye strain and headache if I play in flat 2D. I can't go back to 2D anymore. I always play in max depth setting, and I never experience eyestrain or headaches, and I play for hours everyday...games that range from intense action to simulation. I have tested at least 20 games and no complains. And even after months of use, everytime when I start playing a game, I get amazed with the beauty that it adds to the games. The ghosting is minimal, you won't even notice it when you are busy playing....and you can't find a product that's ghosting-free. This is the closest you can get. The guy who wrote in the review that 3D is fun only for a short time, probably needs to check his eyes with a doctor lol.
Thank You everyone for sharing your experiences. I am glad to find out that the review has not accurate. Unfortunately, I cannot get 3D vision as it is not yet available in UK. It was supposed to release in first quarter of April, but now, people are saying that, it might release in the end of May :(
Thank You everyone for sharing your experiences. I am glad to find out that the review has not accurate. Unfortunately, I cannot get 3D vision as it is not yet available in UK. It was supposed to release in first quarter of April, but now, people are saying that, it might release in the end of May :(
[quote name='angilina' post='533408' date='Apr 22 2009, 09:39 PM']Thank You everyone for sharing your experiences. I am glad to find out that the review has not accurate. Unfortunately, I cannot get 3D vision as it is not yet available in UK. It was supposed to release in first quarter of April, but now, people are saying that, it might release in the end of May :([/quote]
No, people are hoping that it will release at the end of May, until such time as Nvidia deem to tell us, it's all just hopeful wishing.
[quote name='angilina' post='533408' date='Apr 22 2009, 09:39 PM']Thank You everyone for sharing your experiences. I am glad to find out that the review has not accurate. Unfortunately, I cannot get 3D vision as it is not yet available in UK. It was supposed to release in first quarter of April, but now, people are saying that, it might release in the end of May :(
No, people are hoping that it will release at the end of May, until such time as Nvidia deem to tell us, it's all just hopeful wishing.
Built
Asus Striker 2 Extreme
QX9650 @ 3.0ghz
Black Windowed Silverstone TJ09
BFG GTX 295
24" BenQ FP241W
4GB DDR3@1333mhz OCZ
Galaxy 1000w PSU
G15rev2 Keyboard
150gb Raptor Sata with Vista64 Ultimate
Work In Progress
Asus Rampage Extreme
E8500 @ 3.16ghz - Watercooled with OCZ Hydroflow
Black Windowed Silverstone TJ07 - ThermoChill PA 120.3 Radiator
BFG GTX 295 - Watercooled
24" BenQ FP241W
8GB DDR3@1600mhz Corsair
Corsair 1000w PSU
G19 Keyboard 3.02 drivers
120gb Vertex SSD with Windows 7 64bit Ultimate RC (Build 7100)
[quote name='Captain007' post='533405' date='Apr 22 2009, 10:17 PM']Though it might sound funny, but I gotta tell you honestly that I get eye strain and headache if I play in flat 2D. And even after months of use, everytime when I start playing a game, I get amazed with the beauty that it adds to the games.[/quote]
I've experienced that too. 2D looks so darn flat after a while. I notice this in videos also.
[quote name='Captain007' post='533405' date='Apr 22 2009, 10:17 PM']Though it might sound funny, but I gotta tell you honestly that I get eye strain and headache if I play in flat 2D. And even after months of use, everytime when I start playing a game, I get amazed with the beauty that it adds to the games.
I've experienced that too. 2D looks so darn flat after a while. I notice this in videos also.
[quote name='angilina' post='533171' date='Apr 22 2009, 09:29 AM']I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?[/quote]
[quote name='angilina' post='533171' date='Apr 22 2009, 09:29 AM']I saw a review about Nvidia 3D vision at a site. The review mentioned that, 3D vision is fun but only for some little time. After that, your eyes will start to hurt, ghosting problem is common, etc
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
I find the 3d effect gets better over time, it takes about 5 min for your brain to adjust to seeing 3d on a computer screen when you first try so those testing in a shop will probably get a wrong impression if they only try quickly for 1 or 2 min. This is not a fault of the 3d system it's the fact your brain is has been trained to keep the same focus on a 2d screen your whole life.
After a few days I find the effect becomes excellent and you can crank the depth up, after 2 weeks playing games in 3d becomes normal and games not in 3d are really lacking, like your playing an old game on and old system.
Awesome tech, the few reviews I've read are generally bitching about frame rate drops while missing the point that your games and movies are in high def 3d, quite frankly I could not give a crap about performance loss and it's really not that bad I use 9800gtx+ and all all my games are playable in 3d, I think thats pretty amazing considering technically it's doing twice the work but it actually seems to need approx. 1.8 X the power not 2X.
I find the 3d effect gets better over time, it takes about 5 min for your brain to adjust to seeing 3d on a computer screen when you first try so those testing in a shop will probably get a wrong impression if they only try quickly for 1 or 2 min. This is not a fault of the 3d system it's the fact your brain is has been trained to keep the same focus on a 2d screen your whole life.
After a few days I find the effect becomes excellent and you can crank the depth up, after 2 weeks playing games in 3d becomes normal and games not in 3d are really lacking, like your playing an old game on and old system.
Awesome tech, the few reviews I've read are generally bitching about frame rate drops while missing the point that your games and movies are in high def 3d, quite frankly I could not give a crap about performance loss and it's really not that bad I use 9800gtx+ and all all my games are playable in 3d, I think thats pretty amazing considering technically it's doing twice the work but it actually seems to need approx. 1.8 X the power not 2X.
I would say the wow factor does fade (as it does with anything) but the 3d quickly becomes the norm. 2d gaming while not impossible does become much less preferable when your eyes / brain gets used to real depth and those all important pop out effects. (get your convergence properly set now!)
I would say the wow factor does fade (as it does with anything) but the 3d quickly becomes the norm. 2d gaming while not impossible does become much less preferable when your eyes / brain gets used to real depth and those all important pop out effects. (get your convergence properly set now!)
I think what the OP was really reacting to (way to dig out an old dead thread, btw! lol) was the fact that once your eyes & brain "get used to" the stereo 3d effect after a few hours of gaming you sort of stop "noticing" it. This is not the technology's fault, though -- it's simple psychology. Your brain gets used to ANYTHING that it experiences for any length of time. That's how the brain deals with constant stimulus without you going completely insane from sensory overload.
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
I think what the OP was really reacting to (way to dig out an old dead thread, btw! lol) was the fact that once your eyes & brain "get used to" the stereo 3d effect after a few hours of gaming you sort of stop "noticing" it. This is not the technology's fault, though -- it's simple psychology. Your brain gets used to ANYTHING that it experiences for any length of time. That's how the brain deals with constant stimulus without you going completely insane from sensory overload.
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
Well, its not just for gaming. There is a growing list of movies shot in 3d now that you can finally get your hands on. Also, there are many sites like flicker that have groups dedicated to 3d photographs, so you can see pictures from all over the world in 3d.
Well, its not just for gaming. There is a growing list of movies shot in 3d now that you can finally get your hands on. Also, there are many sites like flicker that have groups dedicated to 3d photographs, so you can see pictures from all over the world in 3d.
[quote name='Chris-NYC' post='548833' date='Jun 4 2009, 05:15 PM']I think what the OP was really reacting to (way to dig out an old dead thread, btw! lol) was the fact that once your eyes & brain "get used to" the stereo 3d effect after a few hours of gaming you sort of stop "noticing" it. This is not the technology's fault, though -- it's simple psychology. Your brain gets used to ANYTHING that it experiences for any length of time. That's how the brain deals with constant stimulus without you going completely insane from sensory overload.
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)[/quote]
It's all so very true! It's an affection i can live with though. :D
[quote name='Chris-NYC' post='548833' date='Jun 4 2009, 05:15 PM']I think what the OP was really reacting to (way to dig out an old dead thread, btw! lol) was the fact that once your eyes & brain "get used to" the stereo 3d effect after a few hours of gaming you sort of stop "noticing" it. This is not the technology's fault, though -- it's simple psychology. Your brain gets used to ANYTHING that it experiences for any length of time. That's how the brain deals with constant stimulus without you going completely insane from sensory overload.
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
It's all so very true! It's an affection i can live with though. :D
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
3D-gaming can cause eyestrain? It's true that excessive settings can cause eyestrain. Myself i game for hours without any problems and i use a 100" projectorsetup.
Ghosting: Seems to be a common problem with different hardwaresetups. Regarding 3d-vision i don't think it's because of the glasses, more about how well the monitor works with it. I don't have 3d-vision but i have an iz3d which also suffers a slight bit of this (new glasses on the way which shows great promise!
"It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower."
Yeah... gamedevelopers haven't written the games for 3d and yet they works so beautifully in 3d!!
Since the later versions of directx were released all objects in a game are usually rendered in a "volymetric space" and in 3d (3d-models). The stereodriver only catches the commands from the game and alter them a little bit which results in different views for each eye thus enabling you to see 3d.
Myself i use other drivers for both my monitor as well as the projectors (iz3d) and i can confirm some games and effects indeed has their flaws. A huge number of games works beautifully though!
Why games runs slower? The graphiccard is forced into rendering twice as much for each frame. I cannot tell about the nvidiadriver but regarding iz3d-driver the slowdown use to be some in between 5-40% measured in frames/second.
Nonethless: If you have the oppurtunity then give it a try. The immersion a properly setuped rig gives easily outshines any other effects regarding gaming.
Cheers!
3D-gaming can cause eyestrain? It's true that excessive settings can cause eyestrain. Myself i game for hours without any problems and i use a 100" projectorsetup.
Ghosting: Seems to be a common problem with different hardwaresetups. Regarding 3d-vision i don't think it's because of the glasses, more about how well the monitor works with it. I don't have 3d-vision but i have an iz3d which also suffers a slight bit of this (new glasses on the way which shows great promise!
"It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower."
Yeah... gamedevelopers haven't written the games for 3d and yet they works so beautifully in 3d!!
Since the later versions of directx were released all objects in a game are usually rendered in a "volymetric space" and in 3d (3d-models). The stereodriver only catches the commands from the game and alter them a little bit which results in different views for each eye thus enabling you to see 3d.
Myself i use other drivers for both my monitor as well as the projectors (iz3d) and i can confirm some games and effects indeed has their flaws. A huge number of games works beautifully though!
Why games runs slower? The graphiccard is forced into rendering twice as much for each frame. I cannot tell about the nvidiadriver but regarding iz3d-driver the slowdown use to be some in between 5-40% measured in frames/second.
Nonethless: If you have the oppurtunity then give it a try. The immersion a properly setuped rig gives easily outshines any other effects regarding gaming.
Cheers!
Mb: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
Cpu: C2D E6600
Gb: Nvidia 7900GT + 8800GTX
3D:100" passive projector polarized setup + 22" IZ3D
Stereodrivers: Iz3d & Tridef ignition and nvidia old school.
100" dlp in 3d?? Ooh, I'm coming over to your place this weekend. ;p
100" dlp in 3d?? Ooh, I'm coming over to your place this weekend. ;p
Asus RIVBE • i7 4930K @ 4.7ghz • 8gb Corsair Dominator Platinum 2133 C8
2xSLI EVGA GTX 770 SC • Creative X-Fi Titanium • 2x 840 SSD + 1TB Seagate Hybrid
EVGA Supernova 1300W• Asus VG278H & nVidia 3d Vision
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XSPC Raystorm (cpu & gpu), XSPC Photon 170, Swiftech D5 vario
Alphacool Monsta 360mm +6x NB e-loop, XT45 360mm +6x Corsair SP120
I've been an exlusive Stereo 3D gamers for the past 15 years and IMHO 3DVision is the best LCD glasses implemented for gamers todate, no eye strain even after hours of play, ghosting 'problem' is not affecting gameplay in most cases. Most likely the author had not been a S3D gamer until the time he tested the 3DVision unit and his experience with it may have been accordingly superficial.
[quote]It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?[/quote]
This "issue" is actually the hilight of Nvidia 3DVision package in particular and Nvidia graphic driver in general. By moving the solution to the driver, Nvidia single handedly removed the burden away from game developers, making virtual all modern games S3D. Being slower is inevitable regardless of where these extra polygons being pushed: from developer's end or Nvidia driver's end - IMO, the reviewer was giving redundant and irrelevant info here: seriously, the amount of polygons are double and what does he expect? Faster? Of course it has to get slower but that's always been the software/hardware development impetus: it has always been overcome with multitude of Nvidia graphic cards and/or in game graphic options.
I've been an exlusive Stereo 3D gamers for the past 15 years and IMHO 3DVision is the best LCD glasses implemented for gamers todate, no eye strain even after hours of play, ghosting 'problem' is not affecting gameplay in most cases. Most likely the author had not been a S3D gamer until the time he tested the 3DVision unit and his experience with it may have been accordingly superficial.
This "issue" is actually the hilight of Nvidia 3DVision package in particular and Nvidia graphic driver in general. By moving the solution to the driver, Nvidia single handedly removed the burden away from game developers, making virtual all modern games S3D. Being slower is inevitable regardless of where these extra polygons being pushed: from developer's end or Nvidia driver's end - IMO, the reviewer was giving redundant and irrelevant info here: seriously, the amount of polygons are double and what does he expect? Faster? Of course it has to get slower but that's always been the software/hardware development impetus: it has always been overcome with multitude of Nvidia graphic cards and/or in game graphic options.
Xeon X5675 hex cores @4.4 GHz, GTX 1070, win10 pro
i7 7700k 5GHz, RTX 2080, win10 pro
Benq 2720Z, w1070, Oculus Rift cv1, Samsung Odyssey+
No, people are hoping that it will release at the end of May, until such time as Nvidia deem to tell us, it's all just hopeful wishing.
No, people are hoping that it will release at the end of May, until such time as Nvidia deem to tell us, it's all just hopeful wishing.
Built
Asus Striker 2 Extreme
QX9650 @ 3.0ghz
Black Windowed Silverstone TJ09
BFG GTX 295
24" BenQ FP241W
4GB DDR3@1333mhz OCZ
Galaxy 1000w PSU
G15rev2 Keyboard
150gb Raptor Sata with Vista64 Ultimate
Work In Progress
Asus Rampage Extreme
E8500 @ 3.16ghz - Watercooled with OCZ Hydroflow
Black Windowed Silverstone TJ07 - ThermoChill PA 120.3 Radiator
BFG GTX 295 - Watercooled
24" BenQ FP241W
8GB DDR3@1600mhz Corsair
Corsair 1000w PSU
G19 Keyboard 3.02 drivers
120gb Vertex SSD with Windows 7 64bit Ultimate RC (Build 7100)
I've experienced that too. 2D looks so darn flat after a while. I notice this in videos also.
I've experienced that too. 2D looks so darn flat after a while. I notice this in videos also.
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?[/quote]
[b]http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=91230&hl=ghosting[/b][b][/b]
Ghosting problem???
As you can see avobe link
Yes! it is true
althought ghosting problem of 3dvision
But i love it
because it bring many amazings to me
after having used to 3d vision
all the games that aren`t supported was deleted from my COMPUTER
byebye~~
Play the games without it?
Oh no!
I don`t want imagine it
never! never!
then
now
3d vision is most lovely item for me!
(but
At first time
i did hate "3dvision"
because of ghosting problem
hahaha :rolleyes: )
(i,m sorry i`m not good at english :rolleyes: )
It was also mentioned in the review that, Games are not yet pre-made for this technology and that Nvidia's software do all the work. This create many problems and make the system runs slower.
Can someone using 3D vision tell me, how true is the info that is described in the review above?
http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=91230&hl=ghosting[b][/b]
Ghosting problem???
As you can see avobe link
Yes! it is true
althought ghosting problem of 3dvision
But i love it
because it bring many amazings to me
after having used to 3d vision
all the games that aren`t supported was deleted from my COMPUTER
byebye~~
Play the games without it?
Oh no!
I don`t want imagine it
never! never!
then
now
3d vision is most lovely item for me!
(but
At first time
i did hate "3dvision"
because of ghosting problem
hahaha :rolleyes: )
(i,m sorry i`m not good at english :rolleyes: )
i7 8700K @4.9
GTX1080Ti
Asrock Z370 Gamming K6
Windows10 64bit
LG OLED UHD 3dtv 55E6K
when it becomes available in UK, get it, get the bundle too, monitor and glasses, you will be simply amazed,
also, remember to download the latest drivers from nvidia's website under 3D vision. dont install from cd you get
when it becomes available in UK, get it, get the bundle too, monitor and glasses, you will be simply amazed,
also, remember to download the latest drivers from nvidia's website under 3D vision. dont install from cd you get
After a few days I find the effect becomes excellent and you can crank the depth up, after 2 weeks playing games in 3d becomes normal and games not in 3d are really lacking, like your playing an old game on and old system.
Awesome tech, the few reviews I've read are generally bitching about frame rate drops while missing the point that your games and movies are in high def 3d, quite frankly I could not give a crap about performance loss and it's really not that bad I use 9800gtx+ and all all my games are playable in 3d, I think thats pretty amazing considering technically it's doing twice the work but it actually seems to need approx. 1.8 X the power not 2X.
After a few days I find the effect becomes excellent and you can crank the depth up, after 2 weeks playing games in 3d becomes normal and games not in 3d are really lacking, like your playing an old game on and old system.
Awesome tech, the few reviews I've read are generally bitching about frame rate drops while missing the point that your games and movies are in high def 3d, quite frankly I could not give a crap about performance loss and it's really not that bad I use 9800gtx+ and all all my games are playable in 3d, I think thats pretty amazing considering technically it's doing twice the work but it actually seems to need approx. 1.8 X the power not 2X.
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
Asus RIVBE • i7 4930K @ 4.7ghz • 8gb Corsair Dominator Platinum 2133 C8
2xSLI EVGA GTX 770 SC • Creative X-Fi Titanium • 2x 840 SSD + 1TB Seagate Hybrid
EVGA Supernova 1300W• Asus VG278H & nVidia 3d Vision
Phanteks Enthoo Primo w/ custom watercooling:
XSPC Raystorm (cpu & gpu), XSPC Photon 170, Swiftech D5 vario
Alphacool Monsta 360mm +6x NB e-loop, XT45 360mm +6x Corsair SP120
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)[/quote]
It's all so very true! It's an affection i can live with though. :D
If you feel yourself stop "noticing" the stereo effect, just take off the glasses for 30 seconds and you will VERY quickly start to appreciate the difference again. I've said it before, I'll say it again: once you've played your favorite game in stereoscopic 3d, there's no going back. :)
And yes, in reality it gets better with time. When you first start using stereo 3d, you can't set the depth much higher than the default 15% without getting a headache -- it's just too much to process of something you've never seen before. But after a couple of weeks, once you have been using 3d Vision for a while your eyes & brain get used to it enough that you can crank the screen depth to around 50% and you really start to appreciate just how remarkable the effect is. :)
It's all so very true! It's an affection i can live with though. :D
Mb: Asus P5W DH Deluxe
Cpu: C2D E6600
Gb: Nvidia 7900GT + 8800GTX
3D:100" passive projector polarized setup + 22" IZ3D
Stereodrivers: Iz3d & Tridef ignition and nvidia old school.