![]() ![]() I would recommend OP trying to get a CRT TV and a real SNES + Mario World Cartridge ( actually SMW is really cheap even today as of 2022 ). I think noone here either understood the question, nor replied to what it was already being asked. And it's a 14" model so it's very compact, although I wouldn't mind having a 20". Also, the quality of composite video is disgustingly awful, even for a digital display: my Epson home theatre projector is both much lower latency at 33ms, and does a much better job handling composite video.Īs a result, I stick to my Sony PVM for retro gaming, since it's got 0ms of lag, and looks great. I've measured that input lag myself, too, using a SNES and a Sony PVM CRT for reference. It's buggy (many resolutions result in letterboxing on all sides even when it's set to scale to full screen), it's slow (takes like 5-10 seconds to change resolutions) and it's laggy (100ms, as mentioned). The problem is that the scaler in it sucks. It's an IPS panel with a cold cathode backlight, 96% AdobeRGB colour coverage, deep colour (10-bit) support, and a million different inputs. Dell's monitors of the era were notoriously laggy, but also very highly regarded for image quality. It's just that it's a display that is optimized for image quality, not speed. It's a Dell U2711, so it's not all that old (4 years old) and it's a rather high-end monitor ($750-1000 when it was new, using the same panel as the Apple Cinema Display did at the time). the games are still totally playable, so it's more of an annoyance than anything. I suspect it's just me being more hyper aware of minor issues as an adult. My emulator seems to be running fine, never dips below 60fps, no audio lag or anything, and the results are the same in SNES9x and Higan. It just feels like playing a PC game at low frame rate. I remember things going slow motion when it got really intense, but this is different. I have been playing on an emulator lately, Higan, and the choppy gameplay at times is distracting me because I remember everything being smoother when I was a kid, but that was before I was exposed to high frame rate PC gaming. Is it normal for there to be some sort of choppiness, especially so when things are moving quickly (like, for example, running in Super Mario World)? I grew up with it and played hundreds (thousands?) of hours, but I feel like my memory may be failing me on this. It has been many years since I actually played on SNES hardware. Ok so this question is a little vague, but I figured you guys would be well informed on the subject.
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