So, I'm not asking for help with anything, just understanding how something works, so I hope this doesn't break the 'not your tech support' rule. Anyway, I just recently got a Philips 4k 55 inch 120hz TV for $398 at Walmart. I noticed a setting called 'perfect motion rate', so I set it to 'max'. It seems to make the frame rate appear faster, or at least more fluid, than it was with it off. What's going on here?
Forgive my ignorance.
>>59212709
>What's going on here?
magic
Probably interpolation
Placebo
The setting does nothing but make your retard brain think the frame rate looks better.
>>59212795
I think somebody needs to dump his fat CRT tv
>>59212882
I don't own a TV, shit for brains. Go drink some bleach and shot yourself, you mouth breathing mongoloid.
Gives you back the other 15 fps supressed by most other television sets all at once so you know it's not placebo and actually feel the difference when it happens
>>59212709
It makes a combo scene from the two scenes either side to effectively give a higher framerate, its the reason for the soap opera effect: https://www.cnet.com/au/news/what-is-the-soap-opera-effect/ on phone so not archiving the link.
>>59212709
>gunshow
>It ended