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axredneck Dec 29, 2021
Can you add "VRAM amount" ?
Linas Dec 29, 2021
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Quoting: axredneckCan you add "VRAM amount" ?
Wouldn't GPU model tell you that?
Shmerl Dec 29, 2021
Switched to 180 Hz display recently. Interestingly, there are more users with 240 Hz displays here than with 180 Hz ones. I guess it's an uncommon value (it's really 165 Hz one but with built in overclock to 180).


Last edited by Shmerl on 29 December 2021 at 10:33 pm UTC
Shmerl Dec 29, 2021
Quoting: LinasWouldn't GPU model tell you that?

Not really, some models have variants. Plus it's a good metric to see explicitly.
Xpander Dec 29, 2021
Quoting: ShmerlSwitched to 180 Hz display recently. Interestingly, there are more users with 240 Hz displays here than with 180 Hz ones. I guess it's an uncommon value (it's really 165 Hz one but with built on overclock to 180).

yeah, i have 170hz monitor, so i just chose the 165hz option as this is close enough. Lots of weirdly overclocked monitors for whatever reason.. like does it really matter if its 144 or 180 ..i guess higher the number the better it looks for some lol
Shmerl Dec 29, 2021
Quoting: Xpanderlike does it really matter if its 144 or 180

The jump from 60 Hz to 144 Hz is surely more significant than from 144 Hz to 180 Hz. But it's still smoother (less motion blur, etc.).

Outside of gaming, the easiest way to see the difference is to scroll a lot of text fast.


Last edited by Shmerl on 29 December 2021 at 10:36 pm UTC
Anza Dec 29, 2021
Quoting: Xpander
Quoting: ShmerlSwitched to 180 Hz display recently. Interestingly, there are more users with 240 Hz displays here than with 180 Hz ones. I guess it's an uncommon value (it's really 165 Hz one but with built on overclock to 180).

yeah, i have 170hz monitor, so i just chose the 165hz option as this is close enough. Lots of weirdly overclocked monitors for whatever reason.. like does it really matter if its 144 or 180 ..i guess higher the number the better it looks for some lol

I guess at least the specifications look better with higher numbers

E-sports players might even get slight advantage from higher refresh rate, but even with that there's must be limit somewhere. Regular gamers won't see any benefit in reaction times, so investing into more expensive display for that reason alone is not worth it.

Thing with overclocked displays though is that they might have ghosting. There are tests that can show that quite clearly with high speed camera. Cheaper alternative is to find review where that has been tested. I guess that's more useful when you're thinking about buying new monitor. If you bough the monitor already, you will stay happier if you don't check the reviews.

I wonder if anybody has done tests if people can tell the refresh rates apart. Could be interesting.
Shmerl Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: AnzaI wonder if anybody has done tests if people can tell the refresh rates apart. Could be interesting.

There are tests that demonstrate the difference: https://blurbusters.com/motion-tests/tools/
ElectricPrism Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: Xpanderlike does it really matter if its 144 or 180

The jump from 60 Hz to 144 Hz is surely more significant than from 144 Hz to 180 Hz. But it's still smoother (less motion blur, etc.).

Outside of gaming, the easiest way to see the difference is to scroll a lot of text fast.

You would thing. I've had 30hz, 60hz, 144hz, 170hz, and 270hz -- 144hz is definitely not the drop-off point, there are noticeable gains at 170 and even 270hz.

240-270 is good enough IMO if you are doing FPS, 144 is meh.
Shmerl Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: ElectricPrism240-270 is good enough IMO if you are doing FPS, 144 is meh.

Good enough in FPS is also relative, if your GPU can't saturate that. Something like CP2077 at 2560x1440 only produces around 70 fps for me. Can't even imagine what kind of GPU will be needed to get 270 fps in it, but I guess in a few generations of them it would be doable.


Last edited by Shmerl on 30 December 2021 at 2:17 am UTC
ElectricPrism Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: ElectricPrism240-270 is good enough IMO if you are doing FPS, 144 is meh.

Good enough in FPS is also relative, if your GPU can't saturate that. Something like CP2077 at 2560x1440 only produces around 70 fps for me. Can't even imagine what kind of GPU will be needed to get 270 fps in it, but I guess in a few generations of them it would be doable.

Right, being able to saturate each refresh with a new frame is an important part of getting the use out of it. I'm on AMD RX 6900 XT so it's not a problem, it's not cheap though or even practical for most people at this time.

For motion sensitive people though, it does make a big difference as lower Hz and FPS don't go over well at all.

I did a lot of monitor research, obviously I found the common online sentiment of 144hz or 165hz being the point of diminishing return to not be correct in my own personal trials as a system builder.

Monitor tech is really in a wonky place this last year, hopefully 2022 will be a little better (Eg: They want you to own one monitor for every use-case, color work, FPS gaming, one that is 4k or more for more screen real estate, etc... I settled on 1440p 170hz ASUS and 270Hz 1080p which are easier to push at that lower resolution -- next on my radar is the LG 42" 4k monitor though I'm sure the refresh rate won't be as good as I would hope. [but this is how advertisers work, they want to sell you every slightly better version as you go, no you can't have a 128 core CPU even though it's invented right away, you need to go through 4, 6, 8, 12, 16, 32, 48, 56, 64, and every in-between before they unlock the technology sitting on their shelf ready to deploy -- at least that was literally Intel for the last 10 years before AMD kicked their ass the last 5 years.)


Last edited by ElectricPrism on 30 December 2021 at 3:28 am UTC
Shmerl Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: ElectricPrismRight, being able to saturate each refresh with a new frame is an important part of getting the use out of it. I'm on AMD RX 6900 XT so it's not a problem, it's not cheap though or even practical for most people at this time.

I have 6800 XT which is only marignally weaker than 6900 XT. And as above, with ultra settings in something like CP2077 I get 70 fps at 2560x1440 (LG 27GP850 with adaptive sync, 180 Hz max). Which I think is great, but it simply means current generation GPUs are not there yet to benefit from 270 Hz. Unless of course you use more mid range games that aren't so demanding.

I agree that monitor tech seems to be progressing slower than it could. For example variable overdrive for some reason is not common place yet.
ElectricPrism Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: ElectricPrismRight, being able to saturate each refresh with a new frame is an important part of getting the use out of it. I'm on AMD RX 6900 XT so it's not a problem, it's not cheap though or even practical for most people at this time.

I have 6800 XT which is only marignally weaker than 6900 XT. And as above, with ultra settings in something like CP2077 I get 70 fps at 2560x1440 (LG 27GP850 with adaptive sync, 180 Hz max). Which I think is great, but it simply means current generation GPUs are not there yet to benefit from 270 Hz. Unless of course you use more mid range games that aren't so demanding.

I agree that monitor tech seems to be progressing slower than it could. For example variable overdrive for some reason is not common place yet.

Yeah I take the meaning behind your point, if I wanted to split a hair, I would argue that specific game devs are becoming increasingly wasteful with hardware resources and just really aren't targeting a scope where FPS would make use of those high refresh rates.

I guess for "most" games we'll just have to wait for the market to be saturated with some version of 170hz or 144hz monitors before gamers start changing the scope of game devs to target their hardware, which... could easily take a few generations.

I'm glad monitor tech has IPS refresh improvements, but it is definitely a point of pain -- I've discussed the situation with other monitor enthusiasts and they have arrived at the same conclusion we are in some kind of fucked up limbo. Ironic that in some ways CRT was superior in some ways for many years.

If we could only get out of this 16:9 thing -- I would be estatic if 16:10 or even 3:2 (frame.work ratio, sony vaio, etc...) came back -- It's really sad that the TV market has essentially taken the monitor market captive and forced compromises, even 1600x1200 in a upgraded form would make for a really nice screen @ 3200x2400 -- maybe as people work at home more, the monitor market will start to overtake the TV market and we'll get some leverage back where all this smart-crap and backdoors aren't installed directly to my screen. /rant

Edit: I suppose there's an argument to be made about use-case, for example FPS or high action gaming are going to notice that higher refresh rate (270hz) at that lower resolution (1080p), RPG, and most use cases are really not going to be noticeably different (above 170hz probably), certainly not web browsing or other standard use-cases (my selection of a higher refresh rate is entirely in an attempt to reduce motion sickness for group gaming)


Last edited by ElectricPrism on 30 December 2021 at 5:51 am UTC
forumcommunist Dec 30, 2021
I find it very interesting that most people on gamingonlinux have nvidia gpus, and not amd gpus.
Shmerl Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: ambersthirdcousinI find it very interesting that most people on gamingonlinux have nvidia gpus, and not amd gpus.

That's not really interesting, this situation is the relic of the past simply reflecting the inertia of things. What's more interesting is the trend of Nvidia usage dropping and AMD growing. That tells the real story.

It has been flat for a while due to shortages since almost no one is upgrading today, but the trend of Nvidia usage on Linux dropping will continue once shortages and pricing will normalize.


Last edited by Shmerl on 30 December 2021 at 8:30 pm UTC
Seegras Dec 30, 2021
Hardware updates? I wish. A better GPU of course, but the bitcoin bros drove the costs of them too high.
Xpander Dec 30, 2021
Quoting: Shmerl
Quoting: Xpanderlike does it really matter if its 144 or 180

The jump from 60 Hz to 144 Hz is surely more significant than from 144 Hz to 180 Hz. But it's still smoother (less motion blur, etc.).

Outside of gaming, the easiest way to see the difference is to scroll a lot of text fast.

yeah, for me 120hz+ really isn't much of a difference, unless i really pay attention or compare side to side. below 120 is felt easily. Though i havent seen 240hz+ in real life, so maybe theres a huge difference between 144 and 240 also., but 120 to 170 feels pretty much same to me, unless i put them side to side to compare.
Hamish Dec 30, 2021
Meanwile here I am using a fourteen year old 60 Hz LCD panel and a CRT monitor...
CyborgZeta Dec 30, 2021
I'm quite satisfied with my used ViewSonic monitor with 75hz and FreeSync. Having played on consoles most of my life, 60+fps is a luxury to me. I don't play multiplayer games, so I'm not interested in dropping tons of money on a new monitor and whatever else kids like these days.

My PC info is completely different now since I'm now using a PC I put together myself. More powerful CPU, more powerful GPU, DDR4 instead of DDR3, and EndeavourOS instead of Debian.


Last edited by CyborgZeta on 30 December 2021 at 6:17 pm UTC
STiAT Dec 30, 2021
A lot of people with pure Arch. Interesting, I have installed it lately again and it is for me still too much hassle to get to a sane installation for a desktop with all the optional depends I had to install to get everything I need working (starting from android phone connecting over printer and scanner, which was not as easy as expected even though it works out of the box on most other distros).

Probably I grew out of wanting to fiddle with the system. It will always have a place in my heart for being as much upstream as possible having used it 2004-2017. But currently Solus caters bettet to my needs.
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