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by SirMaster
868 days ago
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It's nowhere close for me since I can clearly see the individual pixels and aliasing of the Quest 3 screen. But I cannot see the individual pixels and aliasing on my TVs, computer monitors, and projector screens. The PPD (pixels per degree) of the Quest 3 is about 25. The average human eye has the vision capability of about 60 PPD+. Plus after using OLED TVs and monitors I can't go back to using an LCD for video, so the contrast in dark scenes looks poor and washed out to me in the quest. In this regard the AVP is much better as it's using OLED panels with near-infinite contrast. Otherwise, at home I am normally used to movies on my 150" 4K native JVC projector setup where I sit about 11ft away from it giving me about a 53 degree horizontal FOV. I don't want it to be any larger of my FOV, and I wouldn't want to in VR either. |
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That doesn't make it not 1080p -- which is what you were originally claiming it was less than.
I can absolutely see the individual pixels on my 1080p projector too. It's not a problem. It's inherent to 1080p content. It's just what the content is. You're not losing any detail.
And I'm happy you've got $5,000+ to drop on a 4K projector, with the space for a 150" screen. But 99+% of people aren't comparing their VR headset to that. If mean sure, I were you, I wouldn't be watching something on a VR headset either.