[SOLVED] Framerates, Monitors, Pixel Density

Desch_

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Apr 29, 2016
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Will an RTX 2070 get the same frame rates on a 27" 1440p 144hz screen as it would get on a 32" 1440p 144hz screen, just with less pixel density?

or does the increased real estate of screen surface area (+5") cost me some framerates?


Hypothetically speaking, other than size, they are identical VA panels with a <5ms response time.
 
Solution
Everything else being equal, two differently-sized screens (with the same resolution, being driven by the same GPU, etc.) will run at exactly the same frame rate. But yes, since the 32 inch screen is larger yet has the same number of pixels, the pixels are physically larger in order to cover the larger area.

The 32 inch screen will have fewer pixels per square inch than a 27 inch screen with the same resolution, but both screens will run at the same fps.
Everything else being equal, two differently-sized screens (with the same resolution, being driven by the same GPU, etc.) will run at exactly the same frame rate. But yes, since the 32 inch screen is larger yet has the same number of pixels, the pixels are physically larger in order to cover the larger area.

The 32 inch screen will have fewer pixels per square inch than a 27 inch screen with the same resolution, but both screens will run at the same fps.
 
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Solution
Everything else being equal, two differently-sized screens (with the same resolution, being driven by the same GPU, etc.) will run at exactly the same frame rate. But yes, since the 32 inch screen is larger yet has the same number of pixels, the pixels are physically larger in order to cover the larger area.

The 32 inch screen will have fewer pixels per square inch than a 27 inch screen with the same resolution, but both screens will run at the same fps.


so the larger individual pixels arent alightly more demanding? thanks, that suprises me.