[quote="Jarsyl"]I saw the witcher 2 was listed as the only 3d vision ready rpg. I had already heard good things about it, so I decided to pick it up. I go to play it, and there is a good 2 second delay in anything I do, regardless of the settings, while running in 3d. I look it up online, and there are dozens and dozens of website all saying the nvidia 3d drivers ruin the performance of the game. How is it possible that a game which is literally unplayable in 3d be 3d ready? The games like Dragon Age 2 which aren't recommended work 1,000x better than the "3d vision ready" title. What the fuck?[/quote]
The witcher 2 has mouse smoothing which i turned off. I think that is what your problem is, as it made the mouse feel very unresponsive, and this seemed to be worse with low fps. Solution:
Open DocumentsWitcher 2ConfigUser.ini
Go to [MouseInput] section and set
MouseSmoothness=0
Smoothness=0
Hopefully problem solved!
(Also the above mention about vsync is right, that can add a ton af latency in this game. Turn it off, and if you have screen tearing try enabling nvidia adaptive vsync, as that works perfectly for me. Although be warned, others seem to have problems with it not working correctly.)
Jarsyl said:I saw the witcher 2 was listed as the only 3d vision ready rpg. I had already heard good things about it, so I decided to pick it up. I go to play it, and there is a good 2 second delay in anything I do, regardless of the settings, while running in 3d. I look it up online, and there are dozens and dozens of website all saying the nvidia 3d drivers ruin the performance of the game. How is it possible that a game which is literally unplayable in 3d be 3d ready? The games like Dragon Age 2 which aren't recommended work 1,000x better than the "3d vision ready" title. What the fuck?
The witcher 2 has mouse smoothing which i turned off. I think that is what your problem is, as it made the mouse feel very unresponsive, and this seemed to be worse with low fps. Solution:
Open DocumentsWitcher 2ConfigUser.ini
Go to [MouseInput] section and set
MouseSmoothness=0
Smoothness=0
Hopefully problem solved!
(Also the above mention about vsync is right, that can add a ton af latency in this game. Turn it off, and if you have screen tearing try enabling nvidia adaptive vsync, as that works perfectly for me. Although be warned, others seem to have problems with it not working correctly.)
My other TV is a Mitsubishi dlp using vison. Either way it goes over HDMI though, so I don't ready see why itwould be different. What iI'm guessing the problem is is a combination of lag/performance being drastically exacerbated by a 24hz refresh rate. I didn't consider that before since the 24hz seems OK on dragon age 2.
My other TV is a Mitsubishi dlp using vison. Either way it goes over HDMI though, so I don't ready see why itwould be different. What iI'm guessing the problem is is a combination of lag/performance being drastically exacerbated by a 24hz refresh rate. I didn't consider that before since the 24hz seems OK on dragon age 2.
Foreverseeking, thanks, great info. That is probably part of the problem, because the screen isn't choppy like traditional low fps, just incredibly slow and unresponsive.
Foreverseeking, thanks, great info. That is probably part of the problem, because the screen isn't choppy like traditional low fps, just incredibly slow and unresponsive.
The witcher 2 has mouse smoothing which i turned off. I think that is what your problem is, as it made the mouse feel very unresponsive, and this seemed to be worse with low fps. Solution:
Open DocumentsWitcher 2ConfigUser.ini
Go to [MouseInput] section and set
MouseSmoothness=0
Smoothness=0
Hopefully problem solved!
(Also the above mention about vsync is right, that can add a ton af latency in this game. Turn it off, and if you have screen tearing try enabling nvidia adaptive vsync, as that works perfectly for me. Although be warned, others seem to have problems with it not working correctly.)
OS: Win 8 CPU: I7 4770k 3.5GZ GPU: GTX 780ti