Using a reshade black frame insertion shader fx?

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Supermodel_Evelynn
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Re: Using a reshade black frame insertion shader fx?

Post by Supermodel_Evelynn » 17 Jan 2024, 12:52

So I downloaded this software posed here from Git Hub and ran it on my Gigabyte M27Q P monitor and I was completely shocked at how good it runs it runs better than my old Viewsonic XG2431 PureXP mode

It's brighter and has less blur than the viewsonic with the added benefit of me being able to use VRR at the same time something that was not possible on the viewsonic.

I set my monitor to 120hz and it runs street fighter 6 at 60hz / 60 FPS and its almost as clear as a CRT, almost.

I am just shocked that this little piece of software that exist is better than what billion dollar companies can come up with on hardware level.

I cannot believe that there isn't a more robust piece of software like BFI Desktop software, like one where you can adjust how strong you want the BFI etc like nothing exist on the internet to turn your regular monitor into strobe mode except this one little magic piece of software that is almost perfect.

In fact the BFI that comes with my monitor is sooo bad so much cross talk and when I enabled the Desktop software BFI from github ontop of the monitor BFI it actually solves 85% of the cross talk like HOW IS THIS EVEN POSSIBLE???????????

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Re: Using a reshade black frame insertion shader fx?

Post by Chief Blur Buster » 24 Jan 2024, 01:47

Supermodel_Evelynn wrote:
17 Jan 2024, 12:52
It's brighter and has less blur than the viewsonic with the added benefit of me being able to use VRR at the same time something that was not possible on the viewsonic.
It's brighter, but it has more blur (unless you combine the two)

1. Frame-level BFI can be made Brighter = YES
2. Frame-level BFI can have less Crosstalk = YES
3. Frame-level BFI Less Blur = NO (laws of physics)

Some people have more importance on #1 (people like you, XG2431 not better)
Some people have more importance on #2 (people like you, XG2431 not better)
Some people have more importance on #3 (XG2431 is definitely better)

Everybody has different priorities. The XG2431 did not help you, but it did help others.

Therefore, be careful of words, please do not confuse "strobe crosstalk" with "motion blur" -- they are different things. Please do not mislead other forum members by confusing "strobe crosstalk" and "motion blur"
Use the correct words, use the correct terminology; to prevent confusing other people.

BFI at 50%:50% only reduces brightness by 50%, which is less than a lot of hardware strobing, so naturally you're right about brighter.

But if you're not combining hardware strobe at the same time (this trick works on all monitors, including XG2431 and XL2566K and others), then software BFI at 50%:50% can never have less motion blur than hardware strobe.

Mathematically, software-only BFI (without being combined with hardware BFI) can never produce produce less motion blur than hardware BFI.
Supermodel_Evelynn wrote:
17 Jan 2024, 12:52
In fact the BFI that comes with my monitor is sooo bad so much cross talk and when I enabled the Desktop software BFI from github ontop of the monitor BFI it actually solves 85% of the cross talk like HOW IS THIS EVEN POSSIBLE???????????
This is normal.

The software BFI "hides" the strobe crosstalk, because LCD GtG is simply a pixel fading from one color to the next, as seen in these high speed videos. You can see the blurry-wipe effect (LCD GtG fade zone) as the display refreshes top-to-bottom.

Crosstalk is because two adjacent refresh cycles showed up through a strobe backlight (a very advanced explanation is at Electronics Hacking: Creating a Strobe Backlight, scection "Understanding LCD Refresh Behavior Via High Speed Video".

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But if you do a software black frame in between hardware strobes, it helps wipes the adjacent refresh cycles, helping preventing those from strobe crosstalking (GtG slowness between adjacent refresh cycles).

So combined software BFI + hardware strobe reduces strobe crosstalk massively on ALL MONITORs (BenQ, ViewSonic, etc), relative to their existing existing strobe quality.

Combinging hardware BFI and software BFI is a range-extension trick that some people do, to allow lowering of min hardware strobe Hz (e.g. blacking out every 120Hz hardware strobe to emulate 60Hz hardware strobe), but it does have the accidental benefit of helping prevent strobe crosstalk. The main disadvantage is running extra software to do software-based BFI, on top of the existing hardware BFI. And you sometimes may have latency problems with DesktopBFI (especially if blacks out important frames, and you don't see action until the next refresh cycles), so you've got some *possible* game-dependant tradeoffs to contend with. It might not affect the specific game you play.

However, it's a valid and popular trick in the emulator community to range-extend hardware strobe with concurrent software BFI -- we've been doing that for 10 years with some emulators. The trick worked with year 2013's ASUS VG248QE monitor, I posted this information in year 2013.

So, yes, combining software BFI + hardware strobe backlight does two things concurrently:
- Range extension of strobe backlight minimum Hz to lower Hz; and
- Reduction of strobe crosstalk.

For 60Hz software BFI + 120Hz hardware strobe, your panel is still scanning out in 1/120sec, with the black frames clearing the pixels in between. So it sort of emulates Large Vertical Totals in a different way, while also doing the additional step of clearing the pixels quicker.

This trick improves all strobed monitors on the market; but be careful about image retention effects; that's why software BFI generally isn't as popular; Software BFI also improves PureXP Light too, which is also why some people use the combination if they want to reduce strobe crosstalk without using complex QFT tricks.

Also, the Large Vertical Total tricks also reduce strobe crosstalk of brighter PureXP settings like PureXP Normal and PureXP Extreme. Basically, brighter than PureXP Ultra but less crosstalk than PureXP Ultra, but it's complicated user calibration (I tried to get the manufacturer to do it automatically).

(I am sorry that it's more complicated than an airplane cockpit sometimes, but at least the manufacturers let me let users DIY it).
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Supermodel_Evelynn
Posts: 111
Joined: 21 Aug 2022, 14:28

Re: Using a reshade black frame insertion shader fx?

Post by Supermodel_Evelynn » 24 Jan 2024, 10:24

Ooh nice well you will be happy to know I love long technical explanations that's the best part of this forum :D

I stopped using the software BFI because I was getting serious image retention on my monitor like really bad to the point you couldn't see anything else on the monitor.

So now I am waiting on more Blur Buster 2.0 certified monitors to hit the market.

Having VRR + Bright Strobing at 60HZ like 250 nits or even 200 nits with the clarity of Pure XP Ultra would be the dream.

TO be honest even having 150 nits with clarity of Pure XP Ultra would absolutely insane.

The most impressive thing I ever learned in life was on this forum I had no idea Pure XP Ultra was = 2400 HZ OLED

Now I appreciate the amazing tech behind the XG2431 :shock:

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