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Resolution vs Effects (Gaming)

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 10:41 (2138 days ago)

Hey remember when I said 4K was a waste because you could get better looking games at 1080p? That instead of rendering 4x the pixels you could use better effects on the ones that you have with all that extra GPU power?

The Switch port of Wolfenstein New Colossus runs at a low resolution, often down to 640 x 360, but opted to keep all the effects and stuff from the other versions. The result? Well according to Digital Foundry:

"It's the best looking handheld shooter we've ever seen"

#morefxfewerpixels #4KButnotToday

Handheld... Stop muddying the water.

by DEEP_NNN, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 12:20 (2138 days ago) @ Cody Miller

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Handheld... Stop muddying the water.

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 13:37 (2138 days ago) @ DEEP_NNN

Not sure I know what you mean.

I’ve always said that better rendering effects make the game look better than a higher resolution.

When posting the game to the switch, which has very limited GPU resources, the developers had to decide: do we spend those resources on rendering pixels, or on rendering effects? They chose effects, and Digital Foundry said it was the best looking handheld game ever. If they had chosen a higher pixel count, they would sacrifice those effects.

It’s a real life demonstration of what I’ve argued.

It’s a handheld, so what? If a developer targeted their game on an Xbox One X at 1080p, they too could have the best looking console game ever if they put those GPU cycles where you get the biggest benefit.

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Handheld... Stop muddying the water.

by Vortech @, A Fourth Wheel, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 15:11 (2136 days ago) @ Cody Miller

The difference is that the resolution matters far less as the physical screen size decreases. The Switch can be on a large screen for docked mode, but that's not the only way it will be played, and possibly the less common way. And, when they say it's the best HANDHELD shooter they have seen they could just as likely be referring to the smaller screen of handheld as the lower computational power of handheld. I think that is what Deep means.

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Handheld... Stop muddying the water.

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 15:20 (2136 days ago) @ Vortech

The difference is that the resolution matters far less as the physical screen size decreases. The Switch can be on a large screen for docked mode, but that's not the only way it will be played, and possibly the less common way. And, when they say it's the best HANDHELD shooter they have seen they could just as likely be referring to the smaller screen of handheld as the lower computational power of handheld. I think that is what Deep means.

They specifically detail the differences between the game in dock mode and mobile mode, they did in fact play it on a TV too.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Revenant1988 ⌂ @, How do I forum?, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 13:29 (2138 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Hey remember when I said 4K was a waste because you could get better looking games at 1080p? That instead of rendering 4x the pixels you could use better effects on the ones that you have with all that extra GPU power?

The Switch port of Wolfenstein New Colossus runs at a low resolution, often down to 640 x 360, but opted to keep all the effects and stuff from the other versions. The result? Well according to Digital Foundry:

"It's the best looking handheld shooter we've ever seen"


#morefxfewerpixels #4KButnotToday


I know there is a vocal subset of gamers that like to jerk-off to how good a game looks, the resolution, effects blah blah blah.

I am not one of them.

As long as the game is FUN and runs smoothly for what it is, it doesn't have to look hyper realistic etc.

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Ditto.

by CyberKN ⌂ @, Oh no, Destiny 2 is bad, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 13:35 (2138 days ago) @ Revenant1988

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 13:41 (2138 days ago) @ Revenant1988

Hey remember when I said 4K was a waste because you could get better looking games at 1080p? That instead of rendering 4x the pixels you could use better effects on the ones that you have with all that extra GPU power?

The Switch port of Wolfenstein New Colossus runs at a low resolution, often down to 640 x 360, but opted to keep all the effects and stuff from the other versions. The result? Well according to Digital Foundry:

"It's the best looking handheld shooter we've ever seen"


#morefxfewerpixels #4KButnotToday

I know there is a vocal subset of gamers that like to jerk-off to how good a game looks, the resolution, effects blah blah blah.

I am not one of them.

As long as the game is FUN and runs smoothly for what it is, it doesn't have to look hyper realistic etc.

Graphics are not separate from fun. You interface with a game almost exclusively through audio and visual means. What’s more ‘fun’ : exploring a gorgeous detailed world? Or a world that looks like Quake 1? What’s more fun, killing an enemy with a cool explosion with great particle effects, or just having a crappy explosion sprite?

Graphics are part of the fun in a real way. So you should absolutely care how your game looks. Also please point to where I said I want hyper realism, because I never said that.

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 14:18 (2138 days ago) @ Cody Miller

What’s more fun, Halo or Halo 4?

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 14:49 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

What’s more fun, Halo or Halo 4?

You realize art design is a part of graphics right? Halo 4 had worse graphics than Halo 1 IMO. But if you Had Halo 1s art style with better graphics, it’s be even better!

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 18:28 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

What’s more fun, Halo or Halo 4?


You realize art design is a part of graphics right? Halo 4 had worse graphics than Halo 1 IMO. But if you Had Halo 1s art style with better graphics, it’s be even better!

Halo Anniversary begs to differ.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 18:36 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

What’s more fun, Halo or Halo 4?


You realize art design is a part of graphics right? Halo 4 had worse graphics than Halo 1 IMO. But if you Had Halo 1s art style with better graphics, it’s be even better!


Halo Anniversary begs to differ.

Uh no? Anniversary did not have halo’s art style.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Revenant1988 ⌂ @, How do I forum?, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 20:14 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

What’s more fun, Halo or Halo 4?


You realize art design is a part of graphics right? Halo 4 had worse graphics than Halo 1 IMO. But if you Had Halo 1s art style with better graphics, it’s be even better!


Halo Anniversary begs to differ.


Uh no? Anniversary did not have halo’s art style.

LOL YES, it did.

The Elites for example were ripped out Reach!

CEA is arguably in the same 'art' style as the Bungie era games. H4 and H5 are not, at all. Fuck, Halo Wars is in Bungie era style. Halo Wars 2, not so much.

I can't say that if HCE, H2 or H3 had more effects that they would be better games.

From a technical perspective, H4 had a wayy higher level of detail and effects than the previous entries, but that didn't make it a good game. It was ass.

A turd is a turd, no matter how much 'smell' effects you add doesn't make it a better turd.
So what if you can see the corn kernals in 4k!

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Resolution vs Effects

by Coaxkez, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 00:04 (2137 days ago) @ Revenant1988

That's not entirely correct. Each Halo game under Bungie had a slightly different art style. The lines of the designs stayed largely the same, but the approach to rendering them was different in each game.

1 had a clean and sleek look with a strong emphasis on color to differentiate objects and environments, inspired partially by the graphical limitations of the time. 2 made an attempt at a more subdued and photo-realistic style. 3 (and ODST) blended the two into an impressionistic realism by reviving the sleekness and color of 1's art style while retaining the photo-like detail and effects from 2. Reach adapted the Halo art style to a grittier, war movie aesthetic with muted colors, a greater emphasis on developing terrain, and bulkier and more modular character armor.

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Resolution vs Effects

by uberfoop @, Seattle-ish, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 00:15 (2135 days ago) @ Revenant1988

LOL YES, it did.

The Elites for example were ripped out Reach!

Sharing some assets doesn't mean the style is the same. If anything, sharing assets from multiple games with different styles was a visible complaint about CEA.

CEA is arguably in the same 'art' style as the Bungie era games. H4 and H5 are not, at all.

CEA was starting to go in the direction of Halo's 4 and 5 in some respects. It has a lot of disruptive macrodetailing, and makes considerable use of the sorts of teal-and-orange-esque palettes that 343i often likes. It also pretty much dropped Bungie's snazzy specular emphasis.

But also, while there are some common themes through the Bungie Halo games, they don't all share the same art style. Like, Halo 1 is extremely juicy and also oozes with a bit of an almost 1990s sega visual attitude, while Halo's 2 and 3 have an almost stop-motion-action-figures thing going on.

From a technical perspective, H4 had a wayy higher level of detail and effects than the previous entries

Not really. It's got a lot of very polished asset work, and it does make extensive use of techniques that make the environments look like they contain lots of detail. But it also makes a lot of graphical compromises compared with its predecessors.

Although the game supports large numbers of dynamic lights, the quality of dynamic lights is perhaps the worst in the entire series; dynamic lights have no specular reflections, and they're all point lights. So vehicles don't have actual spotlight headlights, there's no flashlight, and there's no gloss to the reflections.

The environmental baked lighting is also compromised in some respects. The game doesn't appear to have the "area specular" that Bungie used for indirect specular in their 360 Halo games, causing snazzy materials in complex lighting environments to often exhibit issues like false rim lighting.

A lot of effects light explosions are just plain toned down, including having less debris from vehicles and such.

A lot of special-case stuff is poor. Water is often very low-quality, not just in terms of splash interactivity but also lighting (a lot of the water doesn't really react to environment lighting at all). And the game is never really asked to do much in terms of weather.

Halo 4 is a very graphically refined game, and it cleverly goes about achieving its visual goals, but it's not the huge-leap-in-every-way that it's sometimes made out to be.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Revenant1988 ⌂ @, How do I forum?, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 15:19 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Hey remember when I said 4K was a waste because you could get better looking games at 1080p? That instead of rendering 4x the pixels you could use better effects on the ones that you have with all that extra GPU power?

The Switch port of Wolfenstein New Colossus runs at a low resolution, often down to 640 x 360, but opted to keep all the effects and stuff from the other versions. The result? Well according to Digital Foundry:

"It's the best looking handheld shooter we've ever seen"


#morefxfewerpixels #4KButnotToday

I know there is a vocal subset of gamers that like to jerk-off to how good a game looks, the resolution, effects blah blah blah.

I am not one of them.

As long as the game is FUN and runs smoothly for what it is, it doesn't have to look hyper realistic etc.


Graphics are not separate from fun. You interface with a game almost exclusively through audio and visual means. What’s more ‘fun’ : exploring a gorgeous detailed world? Or a world that looks like Quake 1? What’s more fun, killing an enemy with a cool explosion with great particle effects, or just having a crappy explosion sprite?

Alright I'll bite- Halo CE VS Destiny 2. I vastly, VASTLY prefer Halo CE over D2. I remember exploring the levels in HCE way past the developers intended scope, such as running out into the middle of nowhere on mission 2, just because I could. Or trying to explore the depths of the silent cartographer. Of course I know there are no enemies down there etc, or the textures ended at a point and things got less polished. It was hella fun!

I absolutely remember exploring the world of the original Doom and Doom 2, for hours. Just because. Legitimate secret areas were icing on the cake. D2 kinda has those with lost sectors, and I remember mentioning what a shame it was that several of them were beautiful to the point where the rest of the game didn't have anything like them visually, that they were unique but they just got....repetitive.

Exploding a group of grunts and elites with a rocket, and then how ms-paint looking their blood puddles on the ground were- didn't care! Popping a dregs head and that woosh of ether that happens is pretty neat too, but I'm not sure that I'd dislike it if it didn't have that for example. It's just satisfying to pop them.


D2. I stopped playing it. It isn't fun for me. It LOOKS GORGEOUS. Fantastic attention paid to details and environments. But none of that matters. It's just D1 all over again. No substance. Can't explore as much. Feels like it isn't encouraged, actually it feels like it's discouraged. "See somewhere and you can go there" LMAO- noooope.

Graphics are part of the fun in a real way. So you should absolutely care how your game looks. Also please point to where I said I want hyper realism, because I never said that.

I didn't and I never said you did.

I simply commented that I think people who focus on graphics miss the point.

Did playing D1 on xbox 360 make it any less fun than having the graphics of XB1? I recall several people on these forums saying that it didn't It certainly didn't HURT, but it wasn't important.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 15:31 (2137 days ago) @ Revenant1988

This car looks great but drives like crap.

Okay… but what would you rather have? A car that looks AND drives great? Or a great drive that doesn’t look good? I don’t understand how your point is related to the fact that better graphics make the game better.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Revenant1988 ⌂ @, How do I forum?, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 18:00 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

This car looks great but drives like crap.

Okay… but what would you rather have? A car that looks AND drives great? Or a great drive that doesn’t look good? I don’t understand how your point is related to the fact that better graphics make the game better.

Haha, I know you don't understand, and that's ok :)

For me, function always wins over fashion.

Your analogy doesn't speak to me because all the cars I've ever had were not the best looking- but they worked well.

Better graphics do not make a game better. (I was really excited to try Agony, it looks great, but it plays bad)

That doesn't mean improvements in graphics can't be appreciated- they just aren't important to what makes something 'fun'.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 18:37 (2137 days ago) @ Revenant1988

This car looks great but drives like crap.

Okay… but what would you rather have? A car that looks AND drives great? Or a great drive that doesn’t look good? I don’t understand how your point is related to the fact that better graphics make the game better.


Haha, I know you don't understand, and that's ok :)

For me, function always wins over fashion.

Your analogy doesn't speak to me because all the cars I've ever had were not the best looking- but they worked well.

Better graphics do not make a game better. (I was really excited to try Agony, it looks great, but it plays bad)

That doesn't mean improvements in graphics can't be appreciated- they just aren't important to what makes something 'fun'.

I would bet a million dollars that a low res 1996ish version of a Journey would have been panned. Read any review: every single one talks about the game’s beauty being part of the enjoyment.

All other things being equal, would you rather be in a good looking environment or a bad one? No sane person would say a bad one.

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 19:10 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

All other things being equal, would you rather be in a good looking environment or a bad one? No sane person would say a bad one.

Sure, but that’s completely different from the argument that more effects is better than more resolution. I might agree, I might not. That’s hard to judge unless you’ve got a strong PC and can customize those things a bit. I know that Destiny 2 looks noticeably better on One X in native 4K than it does on PS4 with checker boarding. Would it be worth sacrificing that resolution for more graphical effects? I don’t know, it’s impossible to know because that’s not an option we’re given. I’d argue that Destiny looks pretty damn good regardless, and 4K is not a negligible improvement.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 19:42 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

More effects is demonstrably better than more resolution. Crank Quake 1 up to 8K. Now run Doom 2016 in 1080p. Which is better? Why? Because Wuake has basically no effects.

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 20:44 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

More effects is demonstrably better than more resolution. Crank Quake 1 up to 8K. Now run Doom 2016 in 1080p. Which is better? Why? Because Wuake has basically no effects.

Cody, come the fuck on. That's an asinine example and you know it. You're not even attempting to have a conversation in good faith here.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 23:05 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

More effects is demonstrably better than more resolution. Crank Quake 1 up to 8K. Now run Doom 2016 in 1080p. Which is better? Why? Because Wuake has basically no effects.


Cody, come the fuck on. That's an asinine example and you know it. You're not even attempting to have a conversation in good faith here.

It's exactly the point! Quake's rendering engine is very rudimentary, without all sorts of lighting effects, bump mapping, shaders, etc. The reason games look so much better now is not because the resolution got higher: it's because the rendering engines got more sophisticated.

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 07:38 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Fire up your PC and play any modern game at 480p and then play it at 1080p and then come back and tell me resolution isn’t important.

My point is that until we actually see a developer do what you say instead of shooting for 4K, I won’t know which is better. Again, Destiny 2 looks pretty damn great already. The lighting is already gorgeous, and the effects beautiful and plentiful. How much would it benefit by focusing more on those things? I don’t know, because I haven’t seen it! Maybe it’d be a huge benefit, maybe not that significant.

But as it stands, it’s already gorgeous, and it runs in 4K. So why not both?

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 12:44 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

Fire up your PC and play any modern game at 480p and then play it at 1080p and then come back and tell me resolution isn’t important.

First of all: the jump from 480p to 1080p is huge. Way bigger perceptually than 1080p to 4K.

Second, of course if you can increase the resolution without sacrificing anything else… go for it. But what’s better: 1080p on high, or 4K on low?

But as it stands, it’s already gorgeous, and it runs in 4K. So why not both?

My point has always been that in terms of bang for your buck regarding how good the game looks, resolution is very low on the list. On the PS4 Pro anyway, Destiny 2 has some gnarly, downright ugly visuals when it comes to aliasing and the edges of things. Even in 4K! There are areas where Bungie’s trade offs in rendering don’t work very well.

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 13:21 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Fire up your PC and play any modern game at 480p and then play it at 1080p and then come back and tell me resolution isn’t important.


First of all: the jump from 480p to 1080p is huge. Way bigger perceptually than 1080p to 4K.

When huge swaths of people are now playing on 60”+ televisions, it’s an extremely noticeable jump. I sit about four and half feet from my 55” and anything at 1080p looks noticeably worse.

Second, of course if you can increase the resolution without sacrificing anything else… go for it. But what’s better: 1080p on high, or 4K on low?

What we’re really getting is more like 4K on medium, though.

My point has always been that in terms of bang for your buck regarding how good the game looks, resolution is very low on the list. On the PS4 Pro anyway, Destiny 2 has some gnarly, downright ugly visuals when it comes to aliasing and the edges of things. Even in 4K! There are areas where Bungie’s trade offs in rendering don’t work very well.

I’ve literally never noticed anything like that. Not saying it’s not there, I just haven’t seen it. 4K is a very worthy upgrade in Destiny, in my opinion. I’d love to see developers put in the work and give console players on the high end systems more PC-like options, though. Most only give you presets (if even that much) and they don’t work well. Look at God of War. It gives you an option to prioritize resolution or frame rate, and neither is perfect. Resolution gives you checkerboard 4K and a mostly stable 30fps. Frame rate gives you 1080 with a terrible feeling 45fps with bad frame pacing. If they gave you the options most PC games have and let me turn down some other settings to hit a rock solid 60fps, maybe it’d be worth it, but it doesn’t, so the frame rate option is awful in that it gives you worse visuals and worse feeling frame rate, even though it’s more FPS.

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 14:23 (2137 days ago) @ cheapLEY

When huge swaths of people are now playing on 60”+ televisions, it’s an extremely noticeable jump. I sit about four and half feet from my 55” and anything at 1080p looks noticeably worse.

Movie screens are upward of 25 FEET, and 2K is still the majority standard for mastering and projection. That's changing (pretty soon more than half of releases will be 4K), but there's a reason the standard was set at 2K in the Cineon file format so long ago… it was determined 2K was 'enough' resolution, and what mattered more was color gamut and detail.

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AHHHHHHHHQILYG!

by Vortech @, A Fourth Wheel, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 15:35 (2136 days ago) @ Revenant1988

I'm really tired of everyone arguing past each other every time Cody brings this up.

I'm going to try to review and hopefully we can all get on the same page so at least we can argue the things people are really claiming:

Cody's claims:

1. All other things being equal, better graphics make for a better game. (I suspect he would also admit that this is based only on the fact that graphics are an aspect of a game that can materially influence the quality of the game. That means the same could be said of all aspects of a game - making this claim almost uselessly obvious. (the fallacy of composition notwithstanding) However, that really means people should not be lining up to argue the point.).
No examples of a bad game with good graphics will address this claim. Establishing a "value" for 4K resolution will not access this claim. The only way to argue this is by either claiming a) that graphics have no effect on the quality of a game whatsoever, or b) You somehow played the exact same game with better and worse graphics and are prepared to claim that the better graphics made the game objectively worse (though apparently even that will not work because of the subjectivity of "better" as we have now seen with the Halo argument line which must be as close to this as is possible. Bottom line, there's no reason for arguing this point with him.

2. System resources are better spent on other things than increasing resolution once you hit 1080, because of the increasing cost and diminishing returns past that point. If you must argue something, argue this claim, but please avoid drifting into Claim 1 or listing specific examples of games. This all boils down to Cody's personal preferences — real or imagined since there is no real opportunity to do A/B/X testing on this — and trying to argue that someone does not really like the things they say they like sounds like a phenomenal waste of time to me. It seems like a plausible point, but the biggest weakness (besides the subjectivity and pointlessness mentioned earlier) is the idea that graphics are some sort of zero-sum system that can be evaluated so mathematically. Maybe not going 4K would enable a massive increase in other aspects of the graphics, or maybe it would just mean that they could not justify the development work cost for things that can't be put on a badge on the back of the box, or maybe the development schedule means they have plenty of graphic artists who can make higher Rez textures, but not the coders/artists needed to do other kinds of work. If I were to guess, I would say there is a fuzzy truth in the claim, but that it does not work well as a guiding principle in the real world because of difficulties in implementation and because most games are not art projects funded through a patron of infinite wealth and minimal interest, but commercial enterprises, so giving people what they want to buy is an essential design step or else the whole thing is moot.

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Indeed.

by Ragashingo ⌂, Official DBO Cryptarch, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 15:56 (2136 days ago) @ Vortech

- No text -

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AHHHHHHHHQILYG!

by cheapLEY @, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 16:32 (2136 days ago) @ Vortech

You're operating under the very mistaken assumption that any given conversation with Cody is an attempt to have a productive conversation, rather than just trying to make Cody irritated. (:

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There's collateral damage.

by Vortech @, A Fourth Wheel, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 03:53 (2135 days ago) @ cheapLEY

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Once Again, You're Wrong About Everything.

by Morpheus @, High Charity, Saturday, June 30, 2018, 19:13 (2137 days ago) @ Cody Miller

You thumb your nose at 4K, claiming it to be a waste. And you don't even realize with your precious 1080p, that you're just as blasphemous as the visually addicted set before you! Your own obsession with graphical seduction has become your very downfall. I feel pity for your own soul lost in the perversion of high definition...

Poser.

[image]
[image]

(Y'know, I once had a massive wood top set that was bolted to a TV stand on rollers, it was so damn backbreakingly big. Unfortunately I had to give it away—even though it seriously still worked—but it would've made for an even funnier joke. Oh well!)

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You're playing games in 3D?

by Coaxkez, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 00:08 (2137 days ago) @ Morpheus

True graphical fidelity died with 2D pixel art. Everything since 1995 has been utter trash.

/s

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You're playing games in 3D?

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 00:09 (2137 days ago) @ Coaxkez

True graphical fidelity died with 2D pixel art. Everything since 1995 has been utter trash.

/s

Then set your calendar for August 8th:

http://www.wadjeteyegames.com/2018/06/21/unavowed-coming-august-8th/

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Resolution vs Effects

by cheapLEY @, Sunday, July 01, 2018, 17:57 (2136 days ago) @ Cody Miller

So, I finally took the time to actually watch the video.

Now I disagree with you even more. Wolfenstein on Switch looks like blurry dogshit. It doesn't matter how good the lighting or effects are when it looks like I'm wearing the wrong prescription in my glasses. The actual footage refutes the point you're trying to make.

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I just hit "open thread"

by MacAddictXIV @, Seattle WA, Monday, July 02, 2018, 05:36 (2136 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Cause then I can hit the back button and pretend like I read this entire thread without actually having the think about reading it. It's works great.

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I agree with the idea behind Cody's argument, but...

by Korny @, Dalton, Ga. US. Earth, Sol System, Monday, July 02, 2018, 18:57 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller
edited by Korny, Monday, July 02, 2018, 19:03

The example he gives is extremely dumb.

Resolution is important, but should not be the priority. But... eh. I think it's hard to explain my position, so I've made a quick video to set the foundation of my perspective:


Okay, so yeah, resolution matters, and 4K is the future. But does it really matter that much in the current generation? Nope, and even less so when you're talking about handhelds.

The biggest priority for developers should be performance. The game needs to run well, impress with the effects second, and look sharp third.

-When your effects impress and you focus on resolution, you end up with something like Destiny 2 on Xbox (and yeeeeees Cheap and Kermit, occasionally in certain spots on PS4, no need to nag), with Slowdown galore. Even on Xbone X "enhanced" games, like Destiny 2 and State of Decay 2, you end up with performance-suffering games, as neither example can run above 30fps, and often, the "enhanced" 4K games struggle to even hit that framerate consistently (Battlegrounds, anyone?).

-When you focus on resolution and performance, you end up with visually limited games, like Sea of Thieves, which has flawless water effects and lighting, and 4k textures... but little else in the way of effects or environmental... life?

-The ideal middle ground for this generation, IMO, is games that favor performance and effects over resolution. You end up with games like Horizon Zero Dawn, God of War, Hellblade, and Gears 4. All games that perform at their best at 1080p even on Xbone X, and which are renowned as some of the best looking (and performing) games of this generation, whether or not you play them on the "premiere" consoles.

So yeh.


Tl;dr, player choice is the ideal solution (everyone, be more like DE!), but right now, 1080p is the gold standard. 4k is the future, but the race to jump on it comes as a detriment to the player experience.

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I agree with the idea behind Cody's argument, but...

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Monday, July 02, 2018, 19:42 (2135 days ago) @ Korny
edited by Cody Miller, Monday, July 02, 2018, 19:46

Tl;dr, player choice is the ideal solution (everyone, be more like DE!), but right now, 1080p is the gold standard. 4k is the future, but the race to jump on it comes as a detriment to the player experience.

Also think about the fact that 2K (2048 x 1080) has long been, and still is a cinema standard, where screens are 25 FEET or more. The CGI work in the Martian looked pretty damn realistic on the big screen right? Guess what, it was 2K. It looked so good because they had the ability to spend an hour per frame to render graphical effects.

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Cheaply said he sits 4 feet from his 4K TV set. Assuming he has 20/20 vision, he's just on the threshold of actually being able to see the additional detail. I'm not saying I don't see the difference between 1080p and 4K, but the difference is so incredibly minor for a massive amount of additional work on the GPU.

We could probably have true ray tracing if 1080p was the focus for upcoming hardware.

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I agree with the idea behind Cody's argument, but...

by Korny @, Dalton, Ga. US. Earth, Sol System, Monday, July 02, 2018, 20:04 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Tl;dr, player choice is the ideal solution (everyone, be more like DE!), but right now, 1080p is the gold standard. 4k is the future, but the race to jump on it comes as a detriment to the player experience.


Also think about the fact that 2K (2048 x 1080) has long been, and still is a cinema standard, where screens are 25 FEET or more. The CGI work in the Martian looked pretty damn realistic on the big screen right? Guess what, it was 2K.

I dunno about all of that tangent, since it has absolutely nothing to do with games or modern gaming hardware, making it moot and dumb.

...but I will say that If you look at Fury Road, one of the best-looking films in recent memory, the 4k release is an upscaled version of a 3K film with 2K effects. Doesn't matter, fantastic-looking film.

And a film like Cloverfield, which recently got a 4K release, looks absolutely terrible, and is at its most enjoyable when you're watching it at DVD quality.

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I agree with the idea behind Cody's argument, but...

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 07:24 (2135 days ago) @ Korny

Tl;dr, player choice is the ideal solution (everyone, be more like DE!), but right now, 1080p is the gold standard. 4k is the future, but the race to jump on it comes as a detriment to the player experience.


Also think about the fact that 2K (2048 x 1080) has long been, and still is a cinema standard, where screens are 25 FEET or more. The CGI work in the Martian looked pretty damn realistic on the big screen right? Guess what, it was 2K.


I dunno about all of that tangent, since it has absolutely nothing to do with games or modern gaming hardware, making it moot and dumb.

It has everything to do with what I am saying. 2K is 'good enough', where passing it creates sharply diminishing returns on normal sized screens, especially if you really use great rendering techniques.

The exception is of course VR. VR games absolutely need about 10x the resolution they currently have.

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It's complicated.

by uberfoop @, Seattle-ish, Monday, July 02, 2018, 23:29 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Games need to be rendered at whatever sample rates and output resolutions necessary to pull off the desired visuals. And this is not only subjective, but also sometimes counter-intuitive.

Take Ridge Racer 7. It embraced the whole "HD console" thing, and went 1080p60 at PS3 launch. In order to hit that target, it's graphical makeup is - besides texture quality and resolution - mostly not very interesting even by PS2-era standards. But artistically it was designed around that razor-sharp hyper-speed look... it looks great on my HD LCD, but despite the visual simplicity, it looks poor on my SD CRt; all of its luster is just gone at low res.

Take The Last of Us. Very visually complex, very richly detailed. But, it's got a smudgy visual composition, and assets are generally authored in such a way that they still convey their intent and are readable when heavily filtered down. And consequentially, when I played it in a ridiculous 16:9 360i window on my SD CRT, I was surprised to find a game that still looked excellent and remained very visually readable.

Also think about the fact that 2K (2048 x 1080) has long been, and still is a cinema standard, where screens are 25 FEET or more. The CGI work in the Martian looked pretty damn realistic on the big screen right? Guess what, it was 2K. It looked so good because they had the ability to spend an hour per frame to render graphical effects.

Movie comparisons tend to be misleading in the context of game rendering, for two main reasons.

First, depth of field tends to increase perceived clarity on unblurred objects. That's fine for movies, but with games, having ultra-clarity everywhere is often desirable in and of itself.

Second, we need to separate output reconstruction with sample rate.
Movies aren't rendered at 2K, they're mastered at 2K. When using a physical camera, a ton of photons are involved in determining the color of each pixel. When rendering CGI, a ton of samples are taken at every pixel.
It's easy to blow off this issue by saying "just use better antialiasing", but that's not really a complete solution. There are a lot of types of detail that contribute to a game scene, and within current rendering methodology, very few of them are actually being filtered correctly down from high sample rates. And that produces macro-scale inaccuracies that can't simply be swept under the rug.
Even if we're playing on a 1080p display from a considerable distance, there are a ton of respects in which games do look cleaner if you boost the rendering resolution beyond 1080p and do a good resample to produce the final output.

Oh, also:

Assuming he has 20/20 vision

There's a very high probability that he has better than 20/20 vision.

20/20 vision isn't good visual acuity, it's the boundary of what's considered healthy. That is, having acuity worse than 20/20 can be indicative of a problem.

Typical values for healthy young people are more in the ballpark of 20/15. (So a lot of people do even better than that.)

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It's complicated.

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 07:30 (2135 days ago) @ uberfoop
edited by Cody Miller, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 07:34

Movies aren't rendered at 2K, they're mastered at 2K.

The CG work is in fact rendered at 2K if the film is finished in 2K.

When using a physical camera, a ton of photons are involved in determining the color of each pixel. When rendering CGI, a ton of samples are taken at every pixel.
It's easy to blow off this issue by saying "just use better antialiasing", but that's not really a complete solution. There are a lot of types of detail that contribute to a game scene, and within current rendering methodology, very few of them are actually being filtered correctly down from high sample rates. And that produces macro-scale inaccuracies that can't simply be swept under the rug.
Even if we're playing on a 1080p display from a considerable distance, there are a ton of respects in which games do look cleaner if you boost the rendering resolution beyond 1080p and do a good resample to produce the final output.

I am not doubting this, but the boost to image quality is slight., whereas adding better shadows, lighting, shaders etc, creates a massive jump in image quality. Again, Quake 1 looks like ass at ANY resolution, because the renderer is so primitive.

When we are talking about SD level, then resolution can have a great deal of importance. It's why Crash Bandicoot on the PS1 used the 512 x 240 mode: if they rendered at 320 x 240 crash's single pixel eye would often vanish among other things. But in full HD, you've got enough resolution to satisfy human visual acuity in most cases. VR, large cinema screens, and IMAX excepted.

Typical values for healthy young people are more in the ballpark of 20/15. (So a lot of people do even better than that.)

20/15 in my right eye, 20/10 in my left. Checked 6 months ago. And to me 4K on a small screen is such a minor difference.

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It's complicated.

by uberfoop @, Seattle-ish, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 09:42 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller

The CG work is in fact rendered at 2K if the film is finished in 2K.

I'm not sure to what extend rectangular-grid buffers larger than 2K are used, but regardless, prerendered CGI is generally highly supersampled. If you're rasterizing, you use lots of "pixels" to produce the color for each final pixel; if you using a technique along the lines of ray tracing, you cast lots of rays from each pixel.

I am not doubting this, but the boost to image quality is slight.

I'm not arguing otherwise, I'm just explaining why people aren't necessarily unreasonable to disagree.

This isn't a matter that you can address with a simple acuity argument, because undersampling produces artifacts that can be detected much more easily. For instance, it's easy to make out specular flicker on normal map aliasing in some seventh-gen games even if you're playing them on a 40" screen from some ridiculous distance like 50 feet.

People's sensitivity to these sorts of things also need to be weighed against the extent to which they agree with the importance of more complex rendering. I mean, you keep bringing up Quake as this obviously-hideous game; Quake is graphically very simple compared with modern games, but whether it actually looks bad as a result is more subjective and not everyone agrees.

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It's complicated.

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 10:49 (2135 days ago) @ uberfoop
edited by Cody Miller, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 10:55

This isn't a matter that you can address with a simple acuity argument, because undersampling produces artifacts that can be detected much more easily. For instance, it's easy to make out specular flicker on normal map aliasing in some seventh-gen games even if you're playing them on a 40" screen from some ridiculous distance like 50 feet.

You never see artifacts in a movie, even when they are shot in 2K. There is no supersampling going on. There are a set amount of photosensors on the imaging chip. Some cameras like the F65 did supersample. But others like the Alexa don't. You are actually imaging at 2K. You don't see artifacts because the cameras have great post processing to eliminate them.

You can say that reality is analog, so all the 'effects' are done by the time it hits the sensor. Which is the point I'm trying to make. Reality is the ultimate 'resolution doesn't matter as much' argument because a 640 x 480 photograph still looks photorealistic.

The whole point behind anti-aliasing was that it was cheaper than supersampling. If it weren't a good 'bang for the buck' the algorithms wouldn't exist. In your example, the developers could have lowered the resolution, and increased the filtering to eliminate the flicker with the extra GPU cycles that freed up.

Likewise render farm time is not cheap. You aren't going to render at a higher resolution than you need to get the job done. Your example of using more rays for the ray tracing… this is completely independent of the resolution and actually supports my claim that beyond a certain point other things matter much more than final pixel count.

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It's complicated.

by uberfoop @, Seattle-ish, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 11:42 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller
edited by uberfoop, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 12:29

You never see artifacts in a movie, even when they are shot in 2K. There is no supersampling going on.

Yes there is. Huge numbers of photons strike each photosensor element to contribute to the final image. In graphics rendering terms, that's basically supersampling.

The photosensor grids used in digital cameras often do have elements with a very narrow view, which results in aliasing if the cameras are used without a low-pass filter. Hence, low-pass filters are usually used in circumstances where aliasing is a notable problem with the scenes and cameras involved.

Although some post-processing is always done on digital imagery, the low-pass filters in question are usually optical filters that slightly blur the incoming light before the photosensor grid, causing light that might otherwise have "missed" a photosensor to strike it.
This is the most correct way to antialias a signal: blurring before sampling prevents aliases from being introduced in the first place, whereas sampling and then blurring just blurs the aliases that result from the sampling process.

Anyway, the cleanliness of digital film isn't just a matter of post-process AA.

The whole point behind anti-aliasing was that it was cheaper than supersampling. If it weren't a good 'bang for the buck' the algorithms wouldn't exist. In your example, the developers could have lowered the resolution, and increased the filtering to eliminate the flicker with the extra GPU cycles that freed up.

Yes, but as I stated earlier, there are numerous respects in which the only current way to eliminate the artifacts while producing accurate results is to supersample. Saying that you just need to "increase the filtering" ignores that rendering is far from an easy and solved problem.

So, for the example of specular shimmer. It's very easy to reduce specular shimmer inaccurately.
For example, Halo 1's normal maps undergo trilinear texture filtering, preventing sharp changes in surface normal from flickering in and out of existence. However, this also has the effect of visually flattening surfaces at a distance. This isn't a big issue for Halo 1, because the only materials in the game that have sharp normal maps are smooth besides some large cuts, so the flattening of the normals doesn't harm the perceived material types. But this can be a problem for things like micro-smooth surfaces with complex macro-roughness represented in the normal map; they go from being chunky up close to mirror-like at a distance. Consequentially, games sometimes choose to filter the normal maps sharply, to prioritize material accuracy at the cost of lots of flicker.
Nowadays there are some techniques available to combat this, like Toksvig mapping, which essentially transform normal map contents into material roughness as the normals flatten out at a distance. But there are plenty of circumstances where they're still far off from a ground truth render.

Your example of using more rays for the ray tracing… this is completely independent of the resolution and actually supports my claim that beyond a certain point other things matter much more than resolution.

In terms of combating artifacts relating to inadequate sampling, using more rays is pretty much the same exact approach as rendering at a higher resolution. Both are an increase to the number of point-samples being taken to create the final image.

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How very, "I bet I have better Vitals than you", so-to-speak

by Pyromancy @, discovering fire every week, Tuesday, July 03, 2018, 10:11 (2135 days ago) @ Cody Miller

- No text -

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Resolution vs Effects

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Saturday, July 14, 2018, 10:16 (2124 days ago) @ Cody Miller

The same folks that made the video in the original post seem to think that even the next gen of consoles won't try to target native 4K, but instead upscale in order to spend that extra GPU power on better images and frame rates.

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