Variable refresh rate (VRR) technology forces a TV to match the frame/refresh rates of connected media sources, such as consoles, PCs, and media streamers. When there's a mismatch, fixed refresh rates ...
First teased what seems like ages ago (at CES 2024), Nvidia’s G-Sync Pulsar is a significant enhancement of the company's variable refresh rate (VRR) technology, promising both smoother motion and ...
TL;DR: Nintendo officially confirmed the Switch 2 supports Variable Refresh Rate (VRR) only in handheld mode, not while docked. Despite earlier website claims, VRR on TVs is unsupported due to ...
Luckily, FreeSync is compatible with Nvidia cards. FreeSync, like Nvidia's G-Sync, activates variable refresh rate technology. This will have the monitor adjust its framerate to what is on screen to ...
Nvidia Gsync has been around since 2013, and while this variable refresh rate technology was a game changer when it came out, it was expensive and required gaming monitor manufacturers to implement a ...
ProMotion, which is just Apple speak for variable display refresh rate, is available across the entire iPhone 17 range. Even so, it won't make much of a difference in day-to-day usage. After a long ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results