You're talking complete nonsense. The video clearly shows that scaling occurs on the monitor side. BenQ monitors don't need cru because the monitor supports it at the hardware level, not the software level.Hyote wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 17:25The only way to see whether or not display scaling is in effect is done by checking active resolution in the monitor settings. Your settings still result in GPU scaling and as far as I know display scaled resolutions can only be added via CRU. You are either spreading misinformation on purpose or really believe this to be true just to believe something is good. Please read a real PC optimization guide: https://github.com/valleyofdoom/PC-Tuningnaporitan wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 02:00The author doesn't understand the topic and offers incorrect scaling settings... Many monitors don't support proper scaling for esports games.
I'm providing an example of the correct, true scaling setting on a BenQ XL2546 monitor. (Information taken from the official BenQ website).
My system is completely clean without any settings like CRU, regedit, bcdedit, etc.
How I fixed my desync (fake scaling)
Re: How I fixed my desync (fake scaling)
Re: How I fixed my desync (fake scaling)
No, check the monitor info tab and you will see that the active resolution is 1920x1080 which means it is not display scaled.naporitan wrote: ↑Yesterday, 03:13You're talking complete nonsense. The video clearly shows that scaling occurs on the monitor side. BenQ monitors don't need cru because the monitor supports it at the hardware level, not the software level.Hyote wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 17:25The only way to see whether or not display scaling is in effect is done by checking active resolution in the monitor settings. Your settings still result in GPU scaling and as far as I know display scaled resolutions can only be added via CRU. You are either spreading misinformation on purpose or really believe this to be true just to believe something is good. Please read a real PC optimization guide: https://github.com/valleyofdoom/PC-Tuningnaporitan wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 02:00The author doesn't understand the topic and offers incorrect scaling settings... Many monitors don't support proper scaling for esports games.
I'm providing an example of the correct, true scaling setting on a BenQ XL2546 monitor. (Information taken from the official BenQ website).
My system is completely clean without any settings like CRU, regedit, bcdedit, etc.
Re: How I fixed my desync (fake scaling)
You don't understand how monitor scaling works.Hyote wrote: ↑Yesterday, 15:12No, check the monitor info tab and you will see that the active resolution is 1920x1080 which means it is not display scaled.naporitan wrote: ↑Yesterday, 03:13You're talking complete nonsense. The video clearly shows that scaling occurs on the monitor side. BenQ monitors don't need cru because the monitor supports it at the hardware level, not the software level.Hyote wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 17:25The only way to see whether or not display scaling is in effect is done by checking active resolution in the monitor settings. Your settings still result in GPU scaling and as far as I know display scaled resolutions can only be added via CRU. You are either spreading misinformation on purpose or really believe this to be true just to believe something is good. Please read a real PC optimization guide: https://github.com/valleyofdoom/PC-Tuningnaporitan wrote: ↑28 Oct 2025, 02:00The author doesn't understand the topic and offers incorrect scaling settings... Many monitors don't support proper scaling for esports games.
I'm providing an example of the correct, true scaling setting on a BenQ XL2546 monitor. (Information taken from the official BenQ website).
My system is completely clean without any settings like CRU, regedit, bcdedit, etc.
Re: How I fixed my desync (fake scaling)
benq xl2546
