One that comes to mind is cutscenes. If something was initially designed with 16:9 in mind, expanding the FoV or aspect ratio could reveal parts of the image the devs don’t want the player to see. For example, using 120 FOV at 21:9 in Fallout 4 makes the edge of the camera clip through walls sometimes.
The solution is just designing it with ultrawide in mind. Ultrawide owners are a pretty small part of the gaming market overall, so it’s not surprising they don’t do it.
JohnEdwa@kbin.social 1 year ago
For missing the FOV option, most of the time it's some boneheaded decision to keep the console and PC games identical, as the console versions are optimized to handle exactly the amount of stuff that could be on the screen at once with the default FOV. There really is no real reason not to add it in the PC version - quite a few games do have a disclaimer akin to "If you increase the FOV, you might see graphical glitches", but that's fine.
As for the super ultrawide there is an actual obstacle, the UI. You often can't use the same one as you either have them horribly stretched, sitting in the middle blocking your view or spread uselessly all the way at the edges. So someone has to actually do some work to make it work.
As an example, here's Starfield super ultrawide comparison between the default FOV and 120 degree FOV. You can imagine the performance cost and possible visual glitches you might get from doing that.
verysoft@kbin.social 1 year ago
Some games go to lengths to add accessibility settings, but then leave out one of the biggest: FOV. It's crazy it's left out of any game, or some let you change it but have arbitrarily low limits, ugh.
hypelightfly@kbin.social 1 year ago
Even consoles should have FOV settings. Not every sits the same distance from the same sized screen.
FrankTheHealer@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Some console games do, Apex Legends on Xbox and PS have FoV sliders
nueonetwo@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Thanks for the answer and examples,it make sense I guess. I wish they would just do it to do it rather than require a monetary incentive or something, but I get it is a business after all.