As someone who loves motion smoothing; I’ll never understand this opinion. It doesn’t make everything look like “crap”, it makes it look more realistic. Hell, like it for the fact that it removes motion blur alone.
Trying to go back to watching films at 24Hz is nauseating (especially action movies with a lot of rapid camera momements). I can’t stand it. It’s like trying to go back to console gaming after getting used to 4K 144Hz PC gaming with a 4090.
Try leaving motion smoothing on for a week and then go back to having it off, and you’ll see what I mean. You get used to it, and then suddenly you don’t want to turn it off anymore.
I have had it on for a few hours at times and by looking like crap I would say it ruins the experience for me because it makes every scene and action look like a soap opera or a YouTube video and doesn’t feel like a film anymore and doesn’t carry the same weight. That’s just my opinion obviously. Could see certain scenes and movies working well with that but most I don’t want to feel like I’m on the set of a soap opera.
Wow I really thought I was the only one (okay not literally).
Any show would look like reality TV and the added interpolation just made movement a blurry mess. I steered clear of 60+Hz TVs until this very day because I hate them so much
Sorry I wrote that in a bit of a hurry so I took some shortcuts in my words. Yes, refresh rate isn’t the same as framerate.
You know you can just turn the feature off if you don’t like it, right?
Not if it’s the TV of a random person I am visiting. First time I noticed it.
The thing is, why buy a 600Hz TV if you’re going to turn it off immediately? That’s why I (as a rule of thumb) didn’t bother with TVs that advertised with 200/400/600Hz modes.
LazaroFilm@lemmy.world 10 months ago
God I hated those smooth motion systems. Makes everything look like crap.
Psythik@lemmy.world 10 months ago
As someone who loves motion smoothing; I’ll never understand this opinion. It doesn’t make everything look like “crap”, it makes it look more realistic. Hell, like it for the fact that it removes motion blur alone.
Trying to go back to watching films at 24Hz is nauseating (especially action movies with a lot of rapid camera momements). I can’t stand it. It’s like trying to go back to console gaming after getting used to 4K 144Hz PC gaming with a 4090.
Try leaving motion smoothing on for a week and then go back to having it off, and you’ll see what I mean. You get used to it, and then suddenly you don’t want to turn it off anymore.
keyez@lemmy.world 10 months ago
I have had it on for a few hours at times and by looking like crap I would say it ruins the experience for me because it makes every scene and action look like a soap opera or a YouTube video and doesn’t feel like a film anymore and doesn’t carry the same weight. That’s just my opinion obviously. Could see certain scenes and movies working well with that but most I don’t want to feel like I’m on the set of a soap opera.
Donut@leminal.space 10 months ago
Wow I really thought I was the only one (okay not literally).
Any show would look like reality TV and the added interpolation just made movement a blurry mess. I steered clear of 60+Hz TVs until this very day because I hate them so much
Psythik@lemmy.world 10 months ago
You know you can just turn the feature off if you don’t like it, right? The refresh rate of the TV has nothing to do with it.
Donut@leminal.space 10 months ago
Sorry I wrote that in a bit of a hurry so I took some shortcuts in my words. Yes, refresh rate isn’t the same as framerate.
Not if it’s the TV of a random person I am visiting. First time I noticed it.
The thing is, why buy a 600Hz TV if you’re going to turn it off immediately? That’s why I (as a rule of thumb) didn’t bother with TVs that advertised with 200/400/600Hz modes.