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Post by hammers1man on Jun 11, 2021 3:25:33 GMT -5
What resolution are you playing, do you use vsync, what framerates are you getting? All of this can come into play, vsync can cause micro stutter and can lower your framerate when not hitting your monitor/TV refresh rate. I get zero stutter ever as I am using a variable refresh rate monitor which also reduces latency. This game is more gpu than cpu reliant, I have a 12 core Ryzen 3900X, GTX 1080 (similar performance to your 2060) and can't run the game above 60 fps on 3340 x 1440 resolution on all settings max, I drop sky and cloud settings from ultra to high which has very little difference in visual fidelity and hit 70 to 100 fps. It is a flawless experience on the higher frame rates and GSync, where before I do notice when the game hits the 40 fps range. I turned vsync off on your advice and it did seem to help. I'm running 1920x1080 as I'm connected to a TV. I play racing games and MS Flight Sim flawlessly. I have only seen this screen juddering on a couple of occasions very recently, not suffered it before and I have 600+ hours in the game. I'm wondering when I see these issues I should just do a reboot and see if that sorts it. A bit of advice ,never use the in game Vsync option go into the Nvidia control panel and try Fast Sync if you are getting screen tearing with Vsync turned off. Fast sync only starts to work when you exceed your TV/Monitor refresh rate so you won't get the stuttering and latency if you don't or the screen tearing when you do. Give it a try and hopefully it helps your experience.
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Post by SkyBlueBen on Jun 11, 2021 3:26:59 GMT -5
I turned vsync off on your advice and it did seem to help. I'm running 1920x1080 as I'm connected to a TV. I play racing games and MS Flight Sim flawlessly. I have only seen this screen juddering on a couple of occasions very recently, not suffered it before and I have 600+ hours in the game. I'm wondering when I see these issues I should just do a reboot and see if that sorts it. A bit of advice ,never use the in game Vsync option go into the Nvidia control panel and try Fast Sync if you are getting screen tearing with vsync turned off. Fast sync only starts to work when you exceed your TV/Monitor refresh rate so you won't get the stuttering and latency if you don't or the screen tearing when you do. Give it a try and hopefully it helps your experience. Thanks for the advice. Appreciated. I'll give that a go.
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Post by hammers1man on Jun 11, 2021 3:51:36 GMT -5
A bit of advice ,never use the in game Vsync option go into the Nvidia control panel and try Fast Sync if you are getting screen tearing with vsync turned off. Fast sync only starts to work when you exceed your TV/Monitor refresh rate so you won't get the stuttering and latency if you don't or the screen tearing when you do. Give it a try and hopefully it helps your experience. Thanks for the advice. Appreciated. I'll give that a go. Just a little write up on the benefits of Fast Sync over Vsync. www.alphr.com/what-is-nvidia-fast-sync/
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Post by deathstar on Jun 11, 2021 12:47:29 GMT -5
A bit of advice ,never use the in game Vsync option go into the Nvidia control panel and try Fast Sync if you are getting screen tearing with Vsync turned off. Fast sync only starts to work when you exceed your TV/Monitor refresh rate so you won't get the stuttering and latency if you don't or the screen tearing when you do. Give it a try and hopefully it helps your experience. Totally agree with you there, best to have Vsync off in this game if you can without seeing to much screen tearing depending on your hardware. Personally I use AMD FreeSync instead because I have a radeon card and a monitor that supports it. I'm not entirely sure that the randomness in tempo comes from the servers, it could also be in the unity engine itself which is known to be sort of a budget game engine. But if it is the servers one theory would be that we are playing the golf courses of the server rather than having the map/track installed locally on the system like most other games, I suppose that could theoretically cause some kind of delay/random behavior.
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Post by Kenny on Jun 13, 2021 5:50:03 GMT -5
I’m definitely seeing weird things going on, played a couple of rounds last night and had to hit what would normally have registered as a VF red just to achieve a perfect. Tempo for me (on PS4) seems to vary from day to day / round by round / course by course. I’ve spent a long time on the driving range trying to get some consistency but it has all been to no avail with continued randomness when playing. God help those Xbox players.
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Post by peskypeanut on Jun 13, 2021 6:44:02 GMT -5
I genuinely don’t think there is randomness to tempo. How can you explain the very low scoring on TGC if tempo is random?
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Post by deathstar on Jun 13, 2021 10:47:32 GMT -5
I genuinely don’t think there is randomness to tempo. How can you explain the very low scoring on TGC if tempo is random? Good question, but why is there so many players experiencing this then? are they all making it up or is there something else going on?
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Post by materialization on Jun 13, 2021 11:29:18 GMT -5
I don't think there is randomness in tempo either but there are from what I've experienced, three exceptions.
If you play on xbox, you can feel the randomness like no tommorow and it doesn't matter what you do.
If you play with a wireless controller too far away or there is interference interrupting the stability of the connection sometimes you'll find yourself needing to alter your swing slightly to compensate. I'd either just plug it in or sit real close so it's literally touching. When dealing with milliseconds, it is literally that much of a big deal. (As all pro gamers know).
The frame rate and performance may also have an effect, but if you're on ps5 or have a good PC I doubt that this will ever come into it.
But anyway there's my thoughts.
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Post by PollingPoints on Jun 13, 2021 11:42:43 GMT -5
I had done some testing previously on my PS5 regarding Bluetooth vs wired when I first got my console, at the time I didn't see much difference as I didn't have enough rounds to really see.
I went Wired the other night and I'm not going back. I swear the tempo is so much easier as I'm hitting legit everything perfect now.
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Post by materialization on Jun 13, 2021 11:57:07 GMT -5
Yeah, when it comes to consistency, wire will always be king. Coming from a guy who trails 10 meters of Ethernet cord up my stairs just to avoid wireless lol.
Unless you are prepared to sit so close to your console where the controller is almost touching (which works quite well by the way) it is just less practical to me than just plugging the thing in.
I accept some aren't gonna really feel any difference we all have our own sensitivity to this. After years on xbox, I've just had enough of the lies telling me my shots are fast when they aren't 😜
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Post by sroel908 on Jun 13, 2021 12:04:52 GMT -5
I played without my usual headset plugged into my PS4 controller last night. Had all sorts of weirdness happen - even more so than usual. My swing would hitch when pulling the stick back on any type of shot - happened about 4-5 times during a round on putts, drives, etc.
Plugged the headset back in, and no hitch issue at all.
Not sure what this says, other than it's clear a lot of factors influence the swing and the outcomes you experience.
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Post by blueblood1995 on Jun 13, 2021 18:28:02 GMT -5
I don't think there is randomness in tempo either but there are from what I've experienced, three exceptions. If you play on xbox, you can feel the randomness like no tommorow and it doesn't matter what you do. If you play with a wireless controller too far away or there is interference interrupting the stability of the connection sometimes you'll find yourself needing to alter your swing slightly to compensate. I'd either just plug it in or sit real close so it's literally touching. When dealing with milliseconds, it is literally that much of a big deal. (As all pro gamers know). The frame rate and performance may also have an effect, but if you're on ps5 or have a good PC I doubt that this will ever come into it. But anyway there's my thoughts. I’ve never tried wired with my Xbox Series X and might give this a go to see the effect. Is it a simple matter of plugging the controller in to one of the USB ports on the console and away you go or is there a setting that needs to be changed to avoid the controller continuing to operate in Bluetooth mode? Just to clarify as people are talking about wireless they’re referring to the controller and not the console, ie running an Ethernet cable direct into the console as opposed to WiFi. Thanks Would
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Post by dansamp on Jun 14, 2021 6:18:30 GMT -5
I don't think there is randomness in tempo either but there are from what I've experienced, three exceptions. If you play on xbox, you can feel the randomness like no tommorow and it doesn't matter what you do. If you play with a wireless controller too far away or there is interference interrupting the stability of the connection sometimes you'll find yourself needing to alter your swing slightly to compensate. I'd either just plug it in or sit real close so it's literally touching. When dealing with milliseconds, it is literally that much of a big deal. (As all pro gamers know). The frame rate and performance may also have an effect, but if you're on ps5 or have a good PC I doubt that this will ever come into it. But anyway there's my thoughts. I’ve never tried wired with my Xbox Series X and might give this a go to see the effect. Is it a simple matter of plugging the controller in to one of the USB ports on the console and away you go or is there a setting that needs to be changed to avoid the controller continuing to operate in Bluetooth mode? Just to clarify as people are talking about wireless they’re referring to the controller and not the console, ie running an Ethernet cable direct into the console as opposed to WiFi. Thanks Would I have not seen any discernible difference wired vs. wireless on Series X, for what it's worth! Seems like it's only a PS4 thing.
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Post by materialization on Jun 14, 2021 16:57:39 GMT -5
I don't think there is randomness in tempo either but there are from what I've experienced, three exceptions. If you play on xbox, you can feel the randomness like no tommorow and it doesn't matter what you do. If you play with a wireless controller too far away or there is interference interrupting the stability of the connection sometimes you'll find yourself needing to alter your swing slightly to compensate. I'd either just plug it in or sit real close so it's literally touching. When dealing with milliseconds, it is literally that much of a big deal. (As all pro gamers know). The frame rate and performance may also have an effect, but if you're on ps5 or have a good PC I doubt that this will ever come into it. But anyway there's my thoughts. I’ve never tried wired with my Xbox Series X and might give this a go to see the effect. Is it a simple matter of plugging the controller in to one of the USB ports on the console and away you go or is there a setting that needs to be changed to avoid the controller continuing to operate in Bluetooth mode? Just to clarify as people are talking about wireless they’re referring to the controller and not the console, ie running an Ethernet cable direct into the console as opposed to WiFi. Thanks Would Definitely not referring to Ethernet/WiFi.. was referring specifically to the controller. I think xbox detects automatically when you are plugged into USB and operates by that. I've not noticed any difference on there though. It's ridiculous no matter what.
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Post by PollingPoints on Jun 14, 2021 22:41:57 GMT -5
The game plays 100 percent easier on ps5 with a headset plugged in. I was struggling with tempo after work and bam all tempo issues resolved after I plugged up....This game....
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