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Input lag

3 bytes removed, 11:39, 23 September 2023
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Ways to reduce input lag
*Linux OS in KMS mode<ref>https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/kernel_mode_setting</ref><ref>https://github.com/libretro/RetroArch/wiki/KMS-mode</ref> OR Windows OS with [http://geedorah.com/eiusdemmodi/forum/viewtopic.php?pid=1009#p1009 CRT Emudriver] (You need compatible GPU for this) and use exclusive fullscreen if available (Not borderless windowed, or windowed fullscreen)
*Use [[Display FAQ#CRT TVs|CRT TV]] OR [[Display_FAQ#CRT_monitors|VGA CRT]] with analog input/output. If your GPU only support digital output then use [https://old.reddit.com/user/ahayriSG/comments/16q18h6/highend_dacs_for_crts/ high-end DAC/Digital-to-Analog converters]. [https://youtu.be/WIDeNItt69s?t=1885 HDMI ones generally pretty bad]. See [https://hardforum.com/threads/24-widescreen-crt-fw900-from-ebay-arrived-comments.952788/ this thread] for more information about high-end DACs.
**If you don't have a CRT, you can mitigate input lag on LCDs by setting the display to game mode if available (this will turns off some post-processing effects) and also only pass them their set resolution to native panel resolution (for preventing possible low quality hardware display scaler delay)
**If you have a "Gaming" monitor you can also turn on "Overdrive" if available for overclocking/applies overvoltage to pixels making them react faster (Pixel response time) which results in less ghosting. That said, increasing pixel overdrive may cause inverse ghosting as the increased voltage can cause the pixels to [https://www.rtings.com/monitor/tests/motion/motion-blur-and-response-time#test_4246 overshoot] the colors. See [[#External_Links|these websites and reviews]] to learn information about your display devices capabilities and performance.
*Vulkan driver set to 2 max swapchain images OR OpenGL driver with GPU Hard Sync set to 0
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