Is there a way to overclock my monitor to a higher screen resolution (compressed?)

Spectre YT

Commendable
Jan 28, 2017
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How do you think I can overclock my monitor to make it display 1920 x 1080 compressed so it is better quality images. I heard this is possible as said by LinusTechTips if you know him. It is like multi-anitialising.
Unfortunately, I can't find a way to do what Linus did so is there another alternative? My laptop's specs are:
8GB Ram
Intel HD 620
Windows 10
Core i5-7200U
Dell
Also, no need to post something like "There is no way you overclock your monitor."
All I want to know is if I can practically zoom out of a 1366 x 768 screen to receive better quality images and Game play on some simple games.
Thanks,
Spectre YT
P.S I don't want to get in an argument, if you want to explain to me something like that.
Just tell me why and I'll do my best to reply to the debate. It would be nice for some help. 😀
Thanks again,
Spectre YT
 
I'm not sure what this Linus was proposing, so I can't comment on that part. Can you provide the model of Dell laptop? You mention zooming out from 1366x768, so am I correct to assume this is your screen resolution? As an aside that's kind of a bummer on an otherwise decently specced laptop; I'd have hoped newer kit like that would have a better screen.

At any rate, the maximum resolution of a panel is physically set. That is, that corresponds to the number of physical pixels embedded in the panel horizontally and vertically. No trickery gets around that fact. If the "trick" involves Windows settings to scale down an image, it's never going to match native 1080p quality.

On that note it would be helpful to have a link to this techtips post by Linus to evaluate what he is saying.
 
I don't know if this is what you mean, but AMD's virtual supersampling (VSR) and nVidia's Dynamic Super Resolution (DSR) both allow you to set really high resolutions in-game, which the card downsamples to your monitor's native resolution. This does improve image quality, but as it's just just ordered grid (OGSS) which averages every pixel, nearly vertical or horizontal lines are only poorly antialiased because the average is only one middle shade.

Intel has no plans to do this, and isn't really fast enough anyway.
 
As mentioned, there is vsr and dsr which do this. It would be the easiest and simplest way since you are only affecting games. Downscaling other content like videos won't be better quality. If not done correctly it will just blur. You also mess up the scaling of ui elements but if you really want to downscale everywhere, you can also try setting a custom res.

I'm just being nit picky but it's closer to supersampling than multi sampling. But I'd rather just call it what it is instead of saying it's similar to something else. This is not overclocking since you are not messing with clocks, this is called downscaling.
 
Thank you for your help guys, what I'm trying to say here is if there is a possible way to downscale. I understand what you are saying but I just want to experiment it, not really trey it. Maybe I can see if it is effective on games or images or whatever. I would like to see if it actually "Improves" quality.
I understand that I was quite confusing but all I'm trying to say is that is if there is a way to supersmaple my laptop?
 
I am sorry but I don't understand by what you mean when you said for when you already answered my question but I am thankful for you replying in the first place., I mean, Is there any instructions or a possible way to do so. My Intel HD control Panel is absolutely useless and I have no other programs to literally super sample my laptop. It would be greatly appreciated by me and some other people who experience this same problem or want to experiment with this. Is there like a program or option built into Windows which I can use to proceed through this? I thankful for all these replies and submissions which really help me out and help me to understand such stuff easier Thank you very much for the help.
i don't wish to really use the Vsr or the Dsr, sorry I guess I did not look at this part on my earlier post so my bad. My laptop withholds an Intel Chip (I Know, I Know) as such I am unable to use these features provided from nVidia and AMD. I did a quick search and I think they are only available for the specific Graphics Card. Dynamic Super Resolution is from nVdia and virtual Super Resolution is from AMD, am I correct? If so, this is not going to do as my laptop contains an Intel graphics chip as mentioned before.
 


Sorry but when I use Custom Res, it says on my Intel HD Control Panel that "Max bandwidth exceeded"
I would wish power strip or something worked
Maybe I can Trick my monitor to downloading something that will set its resolution higher than maximum
Thanks so much for your help but there is no other way to get this custom res higher than my native 1366 x 768 resolution. Hope in the future that I can return the favor of your help but as of now, I think there is no possible way to set custom resolutions with Intel which kinda shucks.