Aller au contenu

Photo

Stereoscopic rendering (a no-go)


  • Veuillez vous connecter pour répondre
5 réponses à ce sujet

#1
Skeevley

Skeevley
  • Members
  • 141 messages

Just a quick post to let you know that as of now the Denuvo DRM software is currently the leading theory as to why DAI immediately crashes when trying to launch with stereoscopic rendering enabled. Using TriDef is usually pretty straight-forward, it's good reliable widely-used software, and most new games will at least launch without difficulty (the difficulty comes in the creation of profiles, performance, etc.) To get a solid repeatable crash is not a good sign. Although it's definitely possible that a fix will become available, if you're a stereoscopic gamer you might want to hold off before purchasing this (for my part, it was the "last straw". Since I already considered the game to be critically flawed in many ways I used my refund option and requested a refund).



#2
Spaghetti_Ninja

Spaghetti_Ninja
  • Members
  • 1 454 messages

as of now the Denuvo DRM software is currently the leading theory as to why DAI immediately crashes 

Whose theory, exactly?



#3
Zippy72

Zippy72
  • Members
  • 155 messages

Thanks for your sage advice, which I will now completely and utterly ignore.



#4
Ifandbut01

Ifandbut01
  • Members
  • 155 messages

Any luck with using Nvidia's 3DVision instead of TriDef?



#5
Guest_Caladin_*

Guest_Caladin_*
  • Guests

stereowhowho?



#6
Skeevley

Skeevley
  • Members
  • 141 messages

stereowhowho?

Steroescopic rendering... Most people who don't use it just call it "3D" (like a 3D movie), but that's confusing since most modern games are already rendered in "3D" (they have depth; they aren't sideways scrollers etc...) So in gaming terms, if you are using a 3D compatible display, and the correct software, then you are playing a game in "stereoscopic" mode. It's incredibly awesome. VR rigs like the Rift are the next logical step. Imagine feeling like you are actually walking around a world? DAO and DA2 both looked great stereoscopic, and Skyrim too. The performance hit is considerable though; getting 1/3 the non-stereoscopic frame rate is not unheard of (thus, to play, for example, skyrim at a minimum of 30fps you have to have a rig capable of playing skyrim at a minimum of 90fps without stereoscopic rendering.)