Hello,
I have a GTX 470 graphic card, which support 3D vision 1 as far as I know and I have purchased a monitor which support 3D vision 2 (Asus VG248QE).
I would like to know if a 3D vision 2 glasses kit would be compatible with my graphic card and would render 3D correctly.
Thanks in advance !
Thank you !
I thought It had something to do with the graphic card as the Nvidia Software I have installed contains a 3D vision 1 preview module, but I can understand it as I don't think 3D vision 2 has been released when I installed it.
I thought It had something to do with the graphic card as the Nvidia Software I have installed contains a 3D vision 1 preview module, but I can understand it as I don't think 3D vision 2 has been released when I installed it.
Here is a good image for relative performance between cards:
[img]http://international.download.nvidia.com/webassets/en_US/shared/images/products/shared/lineup.png[/img]
I ran a single GTX 580 for awhile, and it was just barely acceptable for 1280x720@120 gaming in stereoscopic.
Unless you run older stuff like Valve games, you will probably have to turn down the graphics settings to make it playable in stereoscopic.
I think it's still worth it though, 3D is far more impressive to me than stuff like smoke effects and tesselation.
I have a GTX 285 and I can still play in 3D really well. Of course, sometimes I have to set some (not all) graphics settings to medium, but it's far from "You won't get very far trying to game in 3d on that card" or "just barely acceptable for 1280x720".
And with the lack of 3D support nowadays, we already have to disable shadows (or set to low) and postprocessing in most games to be decent in 3D, so just by doing this you already help performance a bit. Oh, and when playing in 3D, you really don't need anti aliasing.
I have a GTX 285 and I can still play in 3D really well. Of course, sometimes I have to set some (not all) graphics settings to medium, but it's far from "You won't get very far trying to game in 3d on that card" or "just barely acceptable for 1280x720".
And with the lack of 3D support nowadays, we already have to disable shadows (or set to low) and postprocessing in most games to be decent in 3D, so just by doing this you already help performance a bit. Oh, and when playing in 3D, you really don't need anti aliasing.
I have a GTX 470 graphic card, which support 3D vision 1 as far as I know and I have purchased a monitor which support 3D vision 2 (Asus VG248QE).
I would like to know if a 3D vision 2 glasses kit would be compatible with my graphic card and would render 3D correctly.
Thanks in advance !
I thought It had something to do with the graphic card as the Nvidia Software I have installed contains a 3D vision 1 preview module, but I can understand it as I don't think 3D vision 2 has been released when I installed it.
I ran a single GTX 580 for awhile, and it was just barely acceptable for 1280x720@120 gaming in stereoscopic.
Unless you run older stuff like Valve games, you will probably have to turn down the graphics settings to make it playable in stereoscopic.
I think it's still worth it though, 3D is far more impressive to me than stuff like smoke effects and tesselation.
Acer H5360 (1280x720@120Hz) - ASUS VG248QE with GSync mod - 3D Vision 1&2 - Driver 372.54
GTX 970 - i5-4670K@4.2GHz - 12GB RAM - Win7x64+evilKB2670838 - 4 Disk X25 RAID
SAGER NP9870-S - GTX 980 - i7-6700K - Win10 Pro 1607
Latest 3Dmigoto Release
Bo3b's School for ShaderHackers
And with the lack of 3D support nowadays, we already have to disable shadows (or set to low) and postprocessing in most games to be decent in 3D, so just by doing this you already help performance a bit. Oh, and when playing in 3D, you really don't need anti aliasing.