Has anyone done a "blind" test to see if people can actually tell a difference above 120Hz?
Studies have shown that the human eyes can detect sub 1ms flashes of light.
How or if that can translate into anything remotely useful or not (IE: beyond the long believed 30-90Hz) is likely subject to endless debate.
Quote from: indy on January 04, 2025, 19:12:10Has anyone done a "blind" test to see if people can actually tell a difference above 120Hz?
I dunno why people keep saying this. Just because YOU cannot tell the difference doesn't mean OTHERS cannot as well. This is like saying, PWM flickering doesn't cause headaches because I'm not affected.
They keep making it BECAUSE there is a market for it. And pushing the limits of tech is always good, maybe not today but tomorrow.
I went from 144 > 240 and there was a difference. Then went from 240 > 360 and could still feel it although to a lesser degree. Going higher is diminishing returns but some people can feel the difference especially in competitive games with very high fps. Even without high fps it helps with motion clarity.