TV Monitor and its appropriate picture resolution

You should stick with your TV's native resolution; 1366 x 768. Anything higher would either won't display, will scroll around, or will be compressed and lose quality.
 
You should stick with your TV's native resolution; 1366 x 768. Anything higher would either won't display, will scroll around, or will be compressed and lose quality.

Hmm I thought i'd be limited with this tv. It's not because of its display mode right ? On my old 17"Sharp the tv's native resolution was 1024x768, and I ran BF2 exactly on 1366 x 768 & the clearity was beautiful. Was a tiny bit oversized by then I reduced it back to its original resolution.

Will this gaming resolution picture quality impress me for the size of the tv ? BF2 for me is very clear, except for its viewing distance.

But then again I don't understand how some people go 2500x1650 or something like that on a 1080p TV. Like I got my very own 37" Sharp in my room but I was hoping the 26" TV that came with my computer would do the job quiet well since it was a gaming series setup.
 
to obtain 2500x1650 youll need to use special monitors/tvs that support that resoultion either using a hdmi lead or dual dvi lead and they go higher than that imagine gaming on a res of 3840x216

1366 x 768. will look good for that tv its only when screens become so big the need for higher resoultions are really becomes more essential
 
to obtain 2500x1650 youll need to use special monitors/tvs that support that resoultion either using a hdmi lead or dual dvi lead and they go higher than that imagine gaming on a res of 3840x216

1366 x 768. will look good for that tv its only when screens become so big the need for higher resoultions are really becomes more essential

26" is pretty big for a computer screen no ? My Screens for 2 years ago were 17". When do you actually start to know the difference. I'm thinking around mid 20" 's low 30" 's. BTW so I need to buy a certain cable that allows me to tune the picture quality.
 
Back
Top