Yes i know that but is it maybe bcuz i play at 1080 that i dont notice the difference.anisotropic filtering should always be on at 16xAF this works on making the textures from far away not look like crap and on modern gpu's has little to no performance impact. AA reduces the smooths the jaggies edges in a game as the resolution goes up you need less AA but it also depends on your monitor size,vision,and how far away you view your monitor from Its nice to have and can really increase the image quality of a game if i can enable it i do. Now If don't mind me asking what resolution do you game on and how good is your vision and how big is your monitor and how far away you sit from it?
DJ_Headshot
angelyoel's forum posts
[QUOTE="angelyoel"]>.>...YES. Enough Said. LOLDo they really make a big difference on gaming? I got an hd6950 and sometimes i i gotta lower these two to get decent fps. i see no difference though.
ShadowDeathX
Do they really make a big difference on gaming? I got an hd6950 and sometimes i i gotta lower these two to get decent fps. i see no difference though.
Ok guys so heres my first rig that i built. Sure it took me a few hours to put it up but damn i never felt so proud in my life lol.
Here are the specs: Amd 1090t at stock speed. XFX HD6950 hasnt been flashed, 8gb ddr3 Ripjaws. 1000W psu. Asus M4a79t Deluxe. Corsair H50 cooling system. Corsair memory ram cooling fan.
Stock Speeds...
Also i got the professional edition so i dont know if u guys ran the basic version at 720p/?P10880 3DMarksSc00pWhat are your specs?
Stock Speeds...
i got the hd6950While playimg a game you wont even notice the lack of phyx, just get a GPU that suits your budget and needs 8)
Silicel1
[QUOTE="angelyoel"][QUOTE="middle-earth88"]
Physics is usless. DO NOT BUY.
Lol crysis 2 is coming out and i bet that game is gonna have crazy physics...Fail.
lol ok i admit it i am a noob lolz
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