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this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2024
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Awwwwwwwww... poor nVidia loses again.
This is silly.
Gsync solved a problem that couldn't be solved before they made it. They stayed committed to that good solution until there was an alternative that reached a reasonable level of performance, then supported both until they could get close without the expensive extra hardware.
Was it worth it? For most people no. But it's still technically superior today and there are loads of options without the extra cost.
The problem was solved by Nvidia, then AMD made it cheap and accessible and not requiring a dedicated hardware module.
For years and years Nvidia increased artificially by up to 150 euros many Gsync screens and for no legitimate reason. Initially there was NO compatibility with free sync at all.
Nvidia wasn't kindly solving a gamers problem at least to after the first year of release of that tech. They were forcibly selling expensive hardware modules nobody needed or wanted. And long after freesync showed you could do it just as well without this expensive requirements.
This hardware module they insisted on selling wasn't solving a technical problem but a money one.
I don't even think anyone was ever able to differentiate between the different qualities of "sync techs".
There absolutely was a legitimate reason. The hardware was not capable of processing the signals. They didn't use FPGAs on a whim. They did it because they were necessary to handle the signals properly.
And you just haven't followed the tech if you think they were indistinguishable. Gsync has supported a much wider variance of frame times over its entire lifespan.