Share Your (Default) Monitor EDID
|
01-14-2025, 11:22 PM
(Last edited: 01-15-2025, 09:09 AM by slashr)
Post: #1
|
|||
|
|||
Share Your (Default) Monitor EDID
Hello, sorry if my english was bad. I'm not english native speaker.
I'm an FPS Hardcore. After months of doing test and research, all the value data of your monitor EDID like default timings, resolutions, refresh rate etc can affect your aim. So, since different monitor brand and type has their unique EDID to each device, i hope the community would like to share their (default) Monitor EDID to let other try and test it. Here's mine AW2518hf https://archive.org/details/dell-aw-2518-hf-808995413 Much thanks |
|||
01-15-2025, 04:25 AM
Post: #2
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Share (Default) Monitor EDID
The EDID is not going to be the source of performance problems.
|
|||
01-15-2025, 06:07 AM
(Last edited: 01-15-2025, 09:23 AM by slashr)
Post: #3
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Share (Default) Monitor EDID
If you mean PC performance then thats right, it doesnt.
Demon1 was unstoppable before (in Evil Geniuses) and then becoming absolute troll when in NRG, why? Is it cause he's bad? Hes a Professional Esports Athlete, and when hes on his prime, hes absolutely destroying the other team. When i look at his settings and peripherals before and after moving to NRG, he had to change the monitor from XL2566k to Asus PG248QP due to NRG Bootcamp using that PG248QP monitor Like i said earlier, it is just because the EDID Value from PG248QP like timings, detailed res, refresh rate etc, is different to the XL2566K that ruined his muscle memory that he build for a long time using XL2566k. reference : https://youtu.be/5WWXJqfqZDY?feature=shared Similiar things happened to Tenz (2021) when he switched to 360hz asus monitor from XL2546, then he decided to switch it back to his XL2546 |
|||
01-15-2025, 04:47 PM
Post: #4
|
|||
|
|||
RE: Share Your (Default) Monitor EDID
The EDID would not cause that. The differences in timing parameters would not be significant enough, and most monitors use the same standards. The refresh rate can make a difference, but the EDID does not control what refresh rates the monitor will accept, so you can't make a 360 Hz monitor accept 500 Hz by changing the EDID unless the monitor allows overclocking, which many don't. Lag and response times can make a difference, but that's up to the monitor's firmware and panel, not the EDID. The XL2566K and PG248QP aren't even the same size, so that could mess up perception. The differences between the monitors themselves and different PCs are more likely to matter than the EDID.
|
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
User(s) browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)