the one setting i think helps is lowering the number of "swap images" from 3 to 1 in the video options menu.
when i plug it into the same lcd tv i mentioned, i can't notice any lag on canoe's emulation, but a little on retroarch NES emulator, but it doesn't make it unplayable. I dont notice any slowdown or weird effects because of the lower framerate, but the input lag seems mostly gone.
If I set the refresh rate Fixed to 58.95, (yes, fifty eight) I am expiriencing almost no input lag in SMW. I do play the games on emulator sometime and of course there is a bit of input lag, but I can get used to it by the end of a stage and have no problems from there on out. with vsync off, it's borderline okay, but the tearing is eye-watering.īack to my SNES classic mini, on my gaming monitor through hdmi, it's gotta be the best gaming experience i've had in decades, and i can't notice the lag on retroarch NES emulator. So I figured to try around with setting the refresh rate Fixed and manual. The emulators by Nintendo used in the NES and SNES classic are the first emulator boxes. I always felt that particularly the Mario platformers (SMB3, SMW, All stars) are unplayable for me on any retroarch system I tried. If you’d like to emulate the NES, you can do that in your browser, but for the best experience, we suggest traveling to the Mushroom Kingdom via higan, a multi-system emulator for Windows, OpenEmu, a gorgeous multi-system emulator for Mac, and NES.emu for Android. practically zero lag from tv), but now with my lcd, i can't make ANY emulator run fast enough with vsync on. The retroarch emulators have a considerably noticeable input lag, pretty much independent on the system you're emulating. But it’s the only emulator we’ve found that can eliminate nasty screen tearing and play with as little input lag as possible, which means it’s the best choice around for NES gaming. Nintendo games are by far the easiest to emulate, thanks to their popularity and straightforward design.
i didn't have this issue back when i had a plasma tv plugged in (i.e.
on my pc and gaming monitor (144hz g-sync with bells and whistles), just about any emulator feels super snappy and as fun and responsive as the original thing, but when i switch to using my lcd tv on the same pc, emulators just aren't cutting it anymore. Can one of them decrease the input lag NES has with HDTV Also, will the noise reduction feature turned on increase input lag Edited on Tue 30th July, 2013 06:22 by tripunktoj.
HOWEVER, it turns out it's the stacking of input lags from my tv plus the emulator that is the culprit.