Glossary:Custom resolution
From PCGamingWiki, the wiki about fixing PC games
Graphics and video
Resolutions
Video settings
- Field of view (FOV)
- Windowed / borderless fullscreen
- Anisotropic filtering (AF)
- Anti-aliasing (AA)
- High-fidelity upscaling
- Vertical sync (Vsync)
- Frame rate (FPS)
- High dynamic range (HDR)
- Ray tracing (RT)
- Color blind mode
Hardware
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Key points
- Custom resolutions allow running games at resolutions your monitor can't normally display.
- This can be used for downsampling anti-aliasing; it is also useful for making custom 4:3 resolutions for games that stretch from 4:3 with normal widescreen resolutions.
- GPU scaling must be enabled and set to "Maintain aspect ratio".[citation needed]
- In some cases, a custom resolution with a lowered vertical value can be used as a last-ditch effort to trick a game into widening its FoV. This induces letterboxing and can negatively impact the UI. If applicable, a tool such as Widescreen Fixer should be preferred.
- This doesn't work for Intel graphics.
Use Custom Resolution Utility (EDID method)[citation needed] |
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AMD/ATI cards (non-EDID method)[citation needed] |
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AMD/ATI 5xxx and newer cards - Crimson drivers (non-EDID method)[1] |
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Nvidia cards (non-EDID method)[3] |
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