When running the games at 60 FPS, on the 60 Hz refresh rate the tearing was quite noticeable, however, the more I went up in range, the harder it was to notice.
At 120, and 144 Hz, I could notice tearing only if I specifically direct my attention to it, and ignored anything else going on in-game.
With the 240+ Hz refresh rate displays being available on the market nowadays, this made me wonder just how useful the Sync technologies are.
I mean weren't the FreeSync/GSync technologies created to eliminate tearing in the first place, by dynamically synchronizing the display's refresh rate to that of the GPU's frame rate output?
So if your display refreshes a high amount of times per second that the tearing would be unnoticeable to the human eye, wouldn't that make FreeSync/GSync technologies obsolete, or useless?
I don't follow the developments of Sync technologies, so I apologize for my ignorance on this topic. This thought randomly popped into my head, so I decided to do some experiments with my own 144 Hz monitor just to see how noticeable the tearing was at those intervals, which kind of led me to the conclusion that unless you directly focus your attention on it, you probably wouldn't notice any tearing at all, because of course, your focus would be on the game itself, not the image synchronization.
Also, slightly off-topic question; What is the minimum amount of time our brain can register the image we see?
The only thing on this topic I've seen was this: https://news.mit.edu/2014/in-the-blink-of-an-eye-0116
And here we already have displays that refresh images every:However, a team of neuroscientists from MIT has found that the human brain can process entire images that the eye sees for as little as 13 milliseconds — the first evidence of such rapid processing speed. That speed is far faster than the 100 milliseconds suggested by previous studies.
6.94ms (144 Hz)
4.167ms (240 Hz)
2.78ms (360 Hz)
So, if we achieve a refresh rate that refreshes the screen below the human brain's possible image registration time, wouldn't it be pointless to go higher than that as far as displays are concerned?

