![]() ![]() It may look blurry on your display, but be rest assured that this blurriness is invisible to Windows and will not impact screenshots. ![]() With those settings, the image assets in the VN will be displayed perfectly 1:1 without any up or downscaling. The easiest way if you don't want to deal with cropping and/or possible up/down scaling is to set your desktop resolution to 800圆00 (if the VN is set to "low" quality) or 1280x960 (if the VN is set to "high" quality) and run the VN in fullscreen. To spell it out to people like Quibi, the 2070S is a GPU based on the Turing GPU architecture which only launched 2.5 years ago, and even the newest stable release of lavfilters (v0.74.1) is basically exactly 2 years old right now (there are newer nightly builds however, such as those used by MPC-HC 1.9.x), so one only needs to go back a couple versions just to v0.72 to find a version that released before Turing GPUs did.Īpply a blue filter in PhotoshopOh, it's really that simple? Now I feel really stupid lol.Alternatively you could just take a screenshot of the VN itself where the blue filter is already applied if you want to make sure your resulting images look identical to how it looks in the VN. If something with the playback engine changed with Turing GPUs, then it's extremely possible that maybe we simply need to update the built-in version of lavfilters. However, the issue is that I've no idea what version of lavfilters it is that we're using. However, the new patch now allows me to play the movies with mpv, so all is well!Ehhh, it's still a bit concerning to me since, last I knew, the built-in video playback functionality that we use is based on lavfilters and therefore this stuff really should "just work," not to mention it's my impression that the mpv option really was originally intended more for non-Windows OSes like Mac or Linux running the VN through Wine or the like. ![]() I have a Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070S so I don't think it's hardware related. Once again, thank you all for helping me! However, the new patch now allows me to play the movies with mpv, so all is well! It's weird because I have no idea what is causing the problem, again I don't think it's my hardware, because everything else works well with it, and I didn't have any issues with decoding h.264 yet, but it doesn't matter, now that I can use mvp it's fine. But I've never heard of a hardware h.264 decoder that couldn't manage 1080p 24fps considering that's what Blu-ray typically uses, so that was pretty much considered the baseline for any and all h.264 hardware decoders back in the late 2000s.I have a Nvidia GeForce RTX 2070S so I don't think it's hardware related. but considering that it's almost certainly using a GPU with h.264 hardware decoding, that would imply to me it's a problem with the hardware decoder and/or its drivers. I must say though, the part with the OP playing at low single-digit fps is certainly one I've not seen before and is something I would expect with with the likes my old 533MHz Pentium3-based Celeron. ![]()
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