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What is the soap opera effect
What is the soap opera effect








Seriously, for years I’ve compared the video and audio quality between no-name and brand-name HDMI cables, and you’d be hard-pressed to know the difference. While I may get pushback from some home theater enthusiasts, most people can’t detect the difference between an HDMI cable purchased for a buck at your local dollar store and one that comes in a fancy box at a boutique electronics retailer. Unless you’re an early adopter with deep pockets, pass on 8K – for now. Now me personally, I get between 30-40fps and I'm more than happy with it.Why? They’re not cheap, there isn’t a lot of 8K content to justify the investment (though it can upscale to near 8K quality), and the jump from 4K to 8K isn’t as significant as HD to 4K (or SD to HD).Īlso, while you may hear phrases like “you’re future-proofing your investment,” chances are new television technologies will debut between now and when 8K becomes mainstream, and you might miss out on them (just as early buyers of 4K did with Dolby Vision, HDR 10+, and so on).Īlso, to get the most out of 8K resolution – when playing 8K content from a PS5 or Xbox Series X videogame, or 8K YouTube channel – you’ll only really appreciate it on a larger screen, such as 80 inches and higher. I'm certain you can see where I'm going with this, ARK as we know even on good rigs has low to medium frame rates, which upsets a lot of people who demand a minimum of 60fps for everything otherwise it's so much hot garbage. It also makes films and television programs look exceedingly weird as they are mostly shot in old school 24fps, and this feature boosts them to anything from 30 to 60 fps, and makes everything resemble a cheap american soap opera. What it does is creates extra frames for the program that you're watching and makes the picture pin sharp and smoother. For those who don't know, Motion Interpolation, which is often called the Soap Opera Effect is a feature of a lot of modern HD televisions.

what is the soap opera effect

So we've recently got a new TV for our feedback at work, and it still has Motion Interpolation enabled, which I really, really detest.










What is the soap opera effect