Yup...PixelDuck87 wrote: ↑27 Jul 2020, 12:07I had no idea that's how freesync/gsync works, I always thought it would directly change the refresh rate of the monitor on the fly...Thank you for explaining this!
"G-SYNC 101: G-SYNC vs. V-SYNC OFF w/FPS Limit":
https://blurbusters.com/gsync/gsync101- ... ettings/6/
"Refresh rate" is used interchangeably, since while VRR does adjust the refresh "rate" (how many times the scanout cycle occurs per second) it does not adjust the max "physical" refresh rate, which is what many people still primarily associate as being the "refresh rate."With a fixed refresh rate display, both the refresh rate and scanout remain fixed at their maximum, regardless of framerate. With G-SYNC, the refresh rate is matched to the framerate, and while the scanout speed remains fixed, the refresh rate controls how many times the scanout is repeated per second (60 times at 60 FPS/60Hz, 45 times at 45 fps/45Hz, etc), along with the duration of the vertical blanking interval (the span between the previous and next frame scan), where G-SYNC calculates and performs all overdrive and synchronization adjustments from frame to frame.
To be even clearer, If you look at this video of an LCD scanout, you'll see what effectively look like top-to-bottom screen sweeps. These sweeps are individual scanout cycles. With VRR, the framerate determines how many of these sweeps occur per second, whereas the currently set physical max refresh rate determines how fast each of the individual sweeps complete:


