Facebook: / frameofessence Twitter: / frameofessence UA-cam: / frameofessence This is just a fun little thing I decided to make. More full science videos are coming soon!
it's kinda hard to see if any notch is missed. just switch between 480 and 720p60, you should see the difference, but if you see no difference, that probably means your device (or application you use) doesn't support displaying videos at 60fps
I repaired my phone screen, I don't know if it's 60 hertz or not because I think it's showing at 45 hertz or something less than 60 but not sure about it.... That's why i want to know how to exactly check the refresh rate of my screen.
Opera web browser has a battery save mode. I thought I'd enable it on my desktop too (saves cpu), but it claims to limit videos to 30fps. It did drop frames when I watched this out of curiosity.
i didn't know about this thing about battery mode limiting videos at 30,.,.,.,. this comment was a life saver i ve been struggling because of this for a long time
This can also help you see your displays pixel response time, by looking at how many hands appear to be on your screen at once. The more you have, the worst the response. I could see 2, and by taking a few photos with my phone, it's about 2.5. That being two bright lines and a third half lit. That makes the pixel response of my display 1/24th of a second (60 / 2.5) when going from full wight to full black.
@@youtubehandlesux At the time i was using an old monitor that still had a VGA port and a DIV connector. so, yes... pre 2011. It still a good monitor that works without any problems, But it's now delegated as a Spare. It was the supplied monitor from my old mesh computer, So Basically a good but standard monitor for the time. It was my first PC that was Solely mine as a kid, Before that, we just had a family desktop computer. My dad got it on a finance plan, and I paid him monthly from my paper round money. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
I think that even if you have a monitor with 1080p resolution (1920x1080) videos in 1080p can still freeze and stutter it seems that there is a percentage of the GPU that can reproduce things, and this has to do with the chipset, which I don't understand much like, the frames for example, your GPU can have a level of 100% content reproduction in 1080p at 60 FPS without freezing, constant this means that this GPU is perfect for playing 1080p 60 FPS content but if you increase the FPS to 120, 144, 244, the efficiency and constancy of your GPU will drop from 100%, and it will start dropping frames, frezzing so you have to define the monitor (and resolution) and the GPU at the same level
Dropped Frames: 0/7212, but when I move my mouse the stats don't change like 1/whatever but it gets laggy if I do that for some reason, can someone tell me what's going on?
Maybe your mouse is lagging the PC, or you're hovering over the screen and the video overlay appears, and your GPU has to process another thing in the screen I tend to remove changing parts of the screen like windows and stuff to save on GPU and render only the video which are the pixels that are changing I also heard that if you play for example a 4K video on a 1080p resolution it will get crispy and clean, because you downscale a large video and it gets better However, if you scale up a 480p on a 4K resolution, it will look worse than on a 480p resolution, because you're enlarging the video, same as enlarging an image, you'll start to see artifacts
Checking with my MacBook Pro, and it often missses some notche completely... 😳 The missed notch will be different every time, and there's no trail (pixel response), it's just completely missed. Keeping your eyes fixed helps a lot catching this; otherwise, recording a slow motion video with the phone will provide clear results.
it depend where i'm looking. If i'm following the tip of the hand, it's perfectly strait and doesn't miss a notches, But if i'm looking the middle of the clock, the hand seems to double at the tip and always miss the middle notches.
it doesn't miss the middle notches, the angle would've been wider inbetween them. i think. it's funny how when you hit pause the second arrow catches up. it's your eyes that can't keep up.
@@fairwind8676 I'm really not sure I understood any of this, but maybe it's not the eye that can't keep up. Maybe it's the screen. Clicking pause doesn't prove anything, you can't trust it. Some people in the comments took photographs of their screens, it's not foolproof but it's better.
@frameofessence Hey, can you also provide the video file just to test it with media player as well, just in case the video decoder in the browser can't keep up (skips frame).
at any frame there is only one clock hand, if you see more then that is due to persistence of vision. Maybe +Frame of Essence could do a video on that.
the thing is this video is relatively easy to render since it's just text and a few lines, a good test would be this with some demanding content playing in the background such as live music videos
Pause the video, then press "." (dot) on your keyboard to go one frame forward at a time. When you have set the video to 60fps, you see that no notches is missed. When you set the video to 30fps, you see that it skips one notch every time you press dot.
correct answer - if it looks like it's hitting all the notches, you're good. to verify, switch to 480p--it'll play in 30hz,--you'll see it noticeably skipping. pro tip- right click the video, click stats for nerds... near resolution, it shows @hz.
There is an obsolete time-unit called "Third", which is 01/60th of a Second. But a modern nickname for that time-unit is called "Jiffy", which I also even prefer too. After long weeks (literally weeks) of searchin 'n' searching, I FINALLY found a 60FPS video where inside of a circle, a line moves at 360° degrees per second, with 6° degrees per frame aka jiffy. What if Clocks ⏰ 🕒 🕕 🕓 had a 4th line that moves exactly 360 degrees every single exact Second, thus measuring Jiffy/Jiffies in a clock? 🤔 That is my usefulness for this amazing video! :D
720p60 completef without framedrop. iPhone 5S (2013) in power saver mode can playback UA-cam in 1080p60 without framedrops. That's why native operation system like iOS is faster and more efficient that a java based one running on a virtual hardware like Android.
I think it's variable because it lags and stutters if you don't have a good GPU (that can handle video rendering/streaming well) paired with a good Internet speed for streaming I don't think the 25/30/60 FPS are constant, I think they're variable Try to open up "Statistics For Nerds" on right click of the video and check your "X dropped of X" frames, and see if there's any dropped frames
If I use 0.25 speed no frames are dropped, that's why I used 0.95 speed to playback 60 FPS content, but now I just accept that my Internet and hardware are bad and download 60 FPS videos to watch on VLC VLC is better than browser, downloaded is better than my Internet When I'm playing on UA-cam, if I move any muscle, like hovering over the video so the overlay appears, or hovering over any element on the website that changes something visually on the screen, the video lags and frames are dropped, even in 0.25 speed It feels like my GPU and the rendering stuff of Firefox can only render one thing at a time, if it tries to render the video and a video preview of a video I'm hovering, some of the two lags Even in VLC the downloaded videos lag, they are always in 1080p resolution, I use Flux because my screen is too bright even on lowest and to block blue light, and Flux needs some GPU processing too, to change the screen colors When I'm in fullscreen on VLC the video looks to be playing in 25/30 FPS, when I use VLC on windowed maximized version, it looks to play at 60 FPS I use 1366x768 resolution because that's the max resolution of my monitor, so the 1080p video is downscaled and it looks better on my resolution than on a 1080p screen resolution But I don't know why the more I make the VLC screen smaller, the smoother the video plays...
If you right-click the video and tap the option in the bottom, a thing will open in the top left of the video. There is a videoport/frames line, and the last of the line, ...(i will say "y" for that space) dropped of ...(and "x" for that space) writing. In the 60 FPS videos, you will see x are increase 30(a number near to 30) in a half second and the 30 FPS videos increase 15(a number near to 15) in a half second. So these numbers showing the frames and y showing the frames that dropped. I don't know normal value of the dropped rate but for my device, the 30 FPS videos have no any dropped and the 60 FPS videos have 1 dropped for 1000 frames usually, and if you have 60+ FPS in games but have dropped in 60 FPS video, it is because of the videos playing with your HDD(or SSD), Ram and processor so videos don't playing with your video card(i know its a so silly senctence).
+fritt bastaken It's probably running at a frame rate that isn't a factor of 60. Some frames are falling behind, and some are skipped so you can catch up.
+Frame of Essence to add to that, you might also be getting general dropped frames where the CPU/GPU is busy computing something else and doesn't have time to get the whole frame rendered before the deadline and skips it to begin the next frame. if it didn't do this, the video would jitter more noticeably and fall behind the audio. My laptop does 60fps but about 1% of the frames were dropped when I watched this, presumably for that reason.
Put it on 1.2x for 72fps [Extensions needed before this point] Put it on 1.25x for 75fps Put it on 1.5x for 90fps Put it on 2x for 120fps [Extensions needed after this point] Put it on 2.4x for 144fps Put it on 2.75x for 165fps Put it on 4x for 240fps Put it on 6x for 360fps
best film of the decade
Not write
Hello! I watching ur video 3 years ago and right now
i am laughing
Yes
Werk
I like it when the clock hand spins.
Me Too!!!
You can click the < or > keys (, or .) to see frame by frame
Cantinho da reflexão lol that doesnt tell you if you can display 60 fps
Vince van Wijk but you can press it and make it look like a java script clock, which is awesome
Thank You I didn't know this earlier
Really COOL trick!
Thank you
But that doesn't help you figure out if your display supports 60fps. Since the frame data is always the same regardless to what your monitor supports.
it's kinda hard to see if any notch is missed.
just switch between 480 and 720p60, you should see the difference,
but if you see no difference, that probably means your device (or application you use) doesn't support displaying videos at 60fps
It's not hard at all. You just advance 1 frame at a time with the > key
I repaired my phone screen, I don't know if it's 60 hertz or not because I think it's showing at 45 hertz or something less than 60 but not sure about it.... That's why i want to know how to exactly check the refresh rate of my screen.
looks like 30fps even though my device does support 60fps
@@Astroisback01 that’s refresh rate not FPS.
@@9852323 um whatever it is
to check if it skips, try the slow-mo feature in your phones camera
It spins backwards on mine.
nice, you must be getting like 0.95fps then? ;)
facepalm.... you mean -30 fps....
Lol u got2fps screen
That suggests that ur drunk
-60 frames per seconds lol.
Opera web browser has a battery save mode. I thought I'd enable it on my desktop too (saves cpu), but it claims to limit videos to 30fps. It did drop frames when I watched this out of curiosity.
same
i didn't know about this thing about battery mode limiting videos at 30,.,.,.,. this comment was a life saver i ve been struggling because of this for a long time
This can also help you see your displays pixel response time, by looking at how many hands appear to be on your screen at once. The more you
have, the worst the response. I could see 2, and by taking a few photos with my phone, it's about 2.5. That being two bright lines and a third half lit. That makes the pixel response of my display 1/24th of a second (60 / 2.5) when going from full wight to full black.
I had one only
have 5
That's probably the response time of your retina or the camera's sensor. Any LCD display made after like 2011 can't have that high of a response time
@@youtubehandlesux At the time i was using an old monitor that still had a VGA port and a DIV connector. so, yes... pre 2011. It still a good monitor that works without any problems, But it's now delegated as a Spare. It was the supplied monitor from my old mesh computer, So Basically a good but standard monitor for the time.
It was my first PC that was Solely mine as a kid, Before that, we just had a family desktop computer. My dad got it on a finance plan, and I paid him monthly from my paper round money. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.
HOLY YOU ARE A SMART
You can also test 120fps by setting the playback speed to 2x
yes , if you switch to 2x you will see that clock hand skips alternately
exactly
@@sandeshmadnur2353 Yeah, even in 1.25 it skips a few obviously since that would be like 75 fps
I think that even if you have a monitor with 1080p resolution (1920x1080) videos in 1080p can still freeze and stutter
it seems that there is a percentage of the GPU that can reproduce things, and this has to do with the chipset, which I don't understand much
like, the frames for example, your GPU can have a level of 100% content reproduction in 1080p at 60 FPS without freezing, constant
this means that this GPU is perfect for playing 1080p 60 FPS content
but if you increase the FPS to 120, 144, 244, the efficiency and constancy of your GPU will drop from 100%, and it will start dropping frames, frezzing
so you have to define the monitor (and resolution) and the GPU at the same level
1080p and 2160p are also needed
me on 30Hz monitor: interesting
Those exist??
thanks to this video I was able to check that, yes, the screen has a lot of lag, but changing from Wayland to X11 fixed it, thankss
make sure you guys have hardware acceleration on in your whatever browser you are using
Dropped Frames: 0/7212,
but when I move my mouse the stats don't change like 1/whatever but it gets laggy if I do that for some reason, can someone tell me what's going on?
Maybe your mouse is lagging the PC, or you're hovering over the screen and the video overlay appears, and your GPU has to process another thing in the screen
I tend to remove changing parts of the screen like windows and stuff to save on GPU and render only the video which are the pixels that are changing
I also heard that if you play for example a 4K video on a 1080p resolution it will get crispy and clean, because you downscale a large video and it gets better
However, if you scale up a 480p on a 4K resolution, it will look worse than on a 480p resolution, because you're enlarging the video, same as enlarging an image, you'll start to see artifacts
This is relaxing
Following the hand feels like it's brushing the inside of my skull
Step three: speed 0.25
True😂
.... wat
shruggo impossible: 99999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999 speed
speed 0.25 wont test anything lol, your monitor isn't displaying 60 fps
ikr
Nice work thanks.
Does slowing to 0.25 help see? I don't know if that counts. Because on 0.25, no notches were missed.
It does help, however you mentioned that no notches were missed then it means your device can support 60fps
yes
@@lasttime500 No it doesn't, it defeats the purpose of the test...
That would be like testing for 15 fps lmfao
Checking with my MacBook Pro, and it often missses some notche completely... 😳 The missed notch will be different every time, and there's no trail (pixel response), it's just completely missed. Keeping your eyes fixed helps a lot catching this; otherwise, recording a slow motion video with the phone will provide clear results.
Hello from 2015 december 20! 720/60fps i didn't miss any of the notches! :) keep up the great vids btw!! tnx! :)
do you feel nostalgic now?
@@bedwarspro1917 yeah, especially with this year 2020!
it depend where i'm looking. If i'm following the tip of the hand, it's perfectly strait and doesn't miss a notches, But if i'm looking the middle of the clock, the hand seems to double at the tip and always miss the middle notches.
it doesn't miss the middle notches, the angle would've been wider inbetween them. i think. it's funny how when you hit pause the second arrow catches up. it's your eyes that can't keep up.
@@fairwind8676 I'm really not sure I understood any of this, but maybe it's not the eye that can't keep up. Maybe it's the screen.
Clicking pause doesn't prove anything, you can't trust it. Some people in the comments took photographs of their screens, it's not foolproof but it's better.
Play at X2 speed , can see miss notches at 60 Hz , but not miss at 120 Hz.
@frameofessence Hey, can you also provide the video file just to test it with media player as well, just in case the video decoder in the browser can't keep up (skips frame).
Put the speed of the video on 0.25, the switch from 480 to 720, and you should see a big difference
That's not testing your monitor, at 480p youtube compresses the image.
Even on a 30fps monitor you'll see it like that.
Omg that thing is skipping A WHOLE QUARTER MY PC IS SO ANNOYING AND MY WIFI IT IS SO HARD TO TYPE HELP MEEEEE
f
at the last second, if you put captions on it says "pi is exactly 3"
damn my 120hz phone is so nice! play it double speed and it works perfect, RealMe 7 is a beast
OH MY GOD, it freaking works on POCO X3 NFC (with custom ROM, probably won't work on MIUI due to 60Hz forcing on UA-cam)
@@Rikysonic yes only with custom rom, the stock rom doesnt let you use the 120 lol
@@megazenn22 I used this video for years to test frame drops on mobile, but this 2x discovery is really INSANE! Thank you so much!!
120hz does look super nice 🤩 (Samsung A53)
thing is 60 is just not what I'm meant to be getting anyway, 50 more like it. this phone only skips 1 maybe sometimes in 480p.
the only way I can get 60 fps is by using theater mode. default view and fullscreen both drop frames like crazy. why?
Dropped frames: 292/3648 this is good or bad thing? i see the clock with no problem
Dat means u r video can go (at this 5 secs) 3648-292fps(mAx) if the clock is working, if not u r running 40fps(average)
probably good enough. i have 12/3600
I have 0/3600 is that good?
@@xemphyr 0 means your device is perfectly stable, with no frame drops, so its very good.
I have 3600/3600 my phone is trash I need a new one
Everytime i pause the video it lands on a notch
Notes:
UA-cam (App) is bottlenecked to 30fps, while the UA-cam (Safari) is running at 60fps.
Ik it's been 9 months but how is UA-cam stuck in 30 in the app, was is just a bug?
wow nice video thanks!
Really Good Method !!
Hmm. In Firefox it skips about 4-5 frames per second, but in Edge it runs perfectly. I assume better hardware acceleration.
It works fine on firefox quantum, atleast for me..
@Ahmed Shahriar I find chrome to be slower. I guess its based by based cases. I do see some computer run faster using chrome, but not for me.
Ok. Do I have to bring my other phone and record this to see if it missed any?
ty now i can make more videos than before
When im looking at the line its a bit blurry is it my eyes or frame rate
I know this video is old but could you make at least a 1080p one
Dropped frames: 206/3600, is this good?
I can tell the difference of 50 fps and 60 fps. Conclusion, I sometimes see some choppiness in 60fps, so I could see more
It's pretty obvious when playing games.
i can´t look for every mark in each frame. If i follow the needle it becomes a bit blury
I can only look for a quarter of the clock sector.
if you pause the video you can use the *.* and *,* keys to cycle the frames
Best video in all youtube👌
Bonus: If you have 120hz screen and play back at 2x speed, you will get 120hz video
It dropped about 10 frames per 0.5 seconds.
its fine thx 😊
pause the video and use "." and "," to go back and forth frames
. makes you go forward 1 frame
, make you go backwards 1 frame
If I slow it down is it still accurate?
idk if I should be more surprised that my 5 years old phone can run 60fps or that I can see the quality to 720p with my internet
that's not really surprising at all, 60fps has been the norm for ages, and 5 years ago is just... 2018 bruh
@@DeMooniC i bought it in 2018, it is from 2015
(i have a new one)
For me it's static with the clock missing two notches
Nice but I don't know if I could really see I can only make out that there are several clock hands next to each other in 720p60....I'm on mobile
at any frame there is only one clock hand, if you see more then that is due to persistence of vision. Maybe +Frame of Essence could do a video on that.
This video x2 on a 120hz display looks so smooth
Same super smooth
UA-cam should allow 240FPS videos
is it a nuff to just pause the video at random times and se if it stops at a line
+qwsdfghjkjhge The clock hand is on a line in every video frame, so it would do that anyway.
Thx
after changed to ssd my fps work better, not increase but reach the maximum potential
Wait, am I supposed to pause it?
"pi is exactly 3" lmao
All good
My phone cant run 720p60
Infact its now running on 480p30
Any of you has framedrop using Bluetooth on iPhone ? I have 17 FPS drop
the thing is this video is relatively easy to render since it's just text and a few lines, a good test would be this with some demanding content playing in the background such as live music videos
its supposed to test the monitor, not your hardware capability. if your monitor is doing more than showing each frame, they are weird
@@0Arcoverde actually a lot of hardware work goes behind rendering each frame: cpu, gpu etc so im pretty sure its not just about the monitor
@@kadupse If you want to be nitpicky with my words sure but I'm pretty sure you understood what I meant
Hi how can you sree if it missed any notches? It just looks like it's moving fast to me and i can't watch all notches at once because myu eye focuses
Pause the video, then press "." (dot) on your keyboard to go one frame forward at a time. When you have set the video to 60fps, you see that no notches is missed. When you set the video to 30fps, you see that it skips one notch every time you press dot.
correct answer - if it looks like it's hitting all the notches, you're good. to verify, switch to 480p--it'll play in 30hz,--you'll see it noticeably skipping.
pro tip- right click the video, click stats for nerds... near resolution, it shows @hz.
change the speed to 0.25x
i use this video to kind of test if my cpu is actual dogshit or it's just youtube
Smooth
I have a 59 Hz display on my phone but the video runs smoothly like 60 fps
With iphone 12 mini, that happened 6 times. Why ??
wow ty! now i'm sure my old 7 years TV is ready for my ps5 on the way :D
Was it ready? 😅😂
@@kh7736 yes, 1920x1080 @60fps
I just bought an iPhone 12 mini and I see missing notches per 7-8 second. How can i solve this?
Same with my XR
There is an obsolete time-unit called "Third", which is 01/60th of a Second. But a modern nickname for that time-unit is called "Jiffy", which I also even prefer too.
After long weeks (literally weeks) of searchin 'n' searching, I FINALLY found a 60FPS video where inside of a circle, a line moves at 360° degrees per second, with 6° degrees per frame aka jiffy.
What if Clocks ⏰ 🕒 🕕 🕓 had a 4th line that moves exactly 360 degrees every single exact Second, thus measuring Jiffy/Jiffies in a clock? 🤔
That is my usefulness for this amazing video! :D
No miss for me :)👍
720p60 completef without framedrop.
iPhone 5S (2013) in power saver mode can playback UA-cam in 1080p60 without framedrops. That's why native operation system like iOS is faster and more efficient that a java based one running on a virtual hardware like Android.
I get 60 fps on ULTRA POWER SAVING MODE bitch
Mine misses about half of the notches. Does that mean 30fps?
I think it's variable because it lags and stutters if you don't have a good GPU (that can handle video rendering/streaming well) paired with a good Internet speed for streaming
I don't think the 25/30/60 FPS are constant, I think they're variable
Try to open up "Statistics For Nerds" on right click of the video and check your "X dropped of X" frames, and see if there's any dropped frames
OMG 😱😱 ... is that ... Comic Sans?
It's Chalkboard
It's not Comic Sans; it's Apple's bootleg of Comic Sans, which is actually kinda bearable to look at.
@@mapelaanjakoodaansuomeksi3432 But it dont.
@@mapelaanjakoodaansuomeksi3432 Wait what?
Cool!
60 fps not working on any device accept smart tv with hdr+10 ! I use iPad Pro gen 3 the fps seem lost if compare to television
No notches are missed on mine.
Set playback speed to 0.25 then keep pressing the space button to play & pause quickly. Then you will see clear difference in 60 fps.
0/3600 on my phone using stats for nerds
It's missing notches
Well, this video confirmed that I have frame drops... Thanks.
rip
useful!
It's missing like every 6 on my crap device I got after my phone broke
'm watch'ng on 800 x 600 and the qual'ty moves amaz'ng
@@user-ws974kj54eaf Because the keyboard is wrong
I Almost Got Hypnotised By This Fcking Shit
The thing is I cant Load 720p because our internet Sucks LOL
If I use 0.25 speed no frames are dropped, that's why I used 0.95 speed to playback 60 FPS content, but now I just accept that my Internet and hardware are bad and download 60 FPS videos to watch on VLC
VLC is better than browser, downloaded is better than my Internet
When I'm playing on UA-cam, if I move any muscle, like hovering over the video so the overlay appears, or hovering over any element on the website that changes something visually on the screen, the video lags and frames are dropped, even in 0.25 speed
It feels like my GPU and the rendering stuff of Firefox can only render one thing at a time, if it tries to render the video and a video preview of a video I'm hovering, some of the two lags
Even in VLC the downloaded videos lag, they are always in 1080p resolution, I use Flux because my screen is too bright even on lowest and to block blue light, and Flux needs some GPU processing too, to change the screen colors
When I'm in fullscreen on VLC the video looks to be playing in 25/30 FPS, when I use VLC on windowed maximized version, it looks to play at 60 FPS
I use 1366x768 resolution because that's the max resolution of my monitor, so the 1080p video is downscaled and it looks better on my resolution than on a 1080p screen resolution
But I don't know why the more I make the VLC screen smaller, the smoother the video plays...
Works perfectly on brave
It isn’t spinning on my screen.
If you right-click the video and tap the option in the bottom, a thing will open in the top left of the video.
There is a videoport/frames line, and the last of the line, ...(i will say "y" for that space) dropped of ...(and "x" for that space) writing. In the 60 FPS videos, you will see x are increase 30(a number near to 30) in a half second and the 30 FPS videos increase 15(a number near to 15) in a half second. So these numbers showing the frames and y showing the frames that dropped. I don't know normal value of the dropped rate but for my device, the 30 FPS videos have no any dropped and the 60 FPS videos have 1 dropped for 1000 frames usually, and if you have 60+ FPS in games but have dropped in 60 FPS video, it is because of the videos playing with your HDD(or SSD), Ram and processor so videos don't playing with your video card(i know its a so silly senctence).
Bruh, my monitor's refresh rate is 60 hertz and I have it on 60 fps, how the hell cant I see it in 60 fps?
Quick question, do you by any chance have AMD Radeon installed on your PC?
@@dinosonicrexdyson5018 No. Nvidia GTX 1060
The clock hand miss 3 notches on mine
My IPad draws a stable pattern: 11-1--Shouldn't it be regular? Why is that? D:
+fritt bastaken It's probably running at a frame rate that isn't a factor of 60. Some frames are falling behind, and some are skipped so you can catch up.
+Frame of Essence to add to that, you might also be getting general dropped frames where the CPU/GPU is busy computing something else and doesn't have time to get the whole frame rendered before the deadline and skips it to begin the next frame. if it didn't do this, the video would jitter more noticeably and fall behind the audio. My laptop does 60fps but about 1% of the frames were dropped when I watched this, presumably for that reason.
Put it on 1.2x for 72fps
[Extensions needed before this point]
Put it on 1.25x for 75fps
Put it on 1.5x for 90fps
Put it on 2x for 120fps
[Extensions needed after this point]
Put it on 2.4x for 144fps
Put it on 2.75x for 165fps
Put it on 4x for 240fps
Put it on 6x for 360fps
А как 144 гц проверить?(
watching this as my phone temperature is 5°c
Rip my Pc lol it smooth AF but when i go full screen it lagged again
Mine hits all 60 notches.