Alfaa :
jdcranke07 :
Alfaa :
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Yes. As long as you do NOT turn your ambient occlusion (anti-aliasing or AA) up all the way. I have two 780ti classys and I hover between 50 and 80 fps while at ultra graphics and max AA. I prefer to have my fps at about 120, so when I go into raids there is absolutely no way I will lag due to my hardware. I'm also on a 1440p panel.
What is ambient occlusion (anti-aliasing or AA)? Is it important for gaming experience?
In your game settings menu (not the interface) you will see anti-aliasing options in a drop down menu right above V-sync. Anti-aliasing is a feature that smooths out the pixelated edges of objects in game. For example, grass, trees, toons, and pretty much everything else. It is a huge drag on your GPU(s) since it/they are the components that are enhancing the game past what it is being delivered to you as. Meaning, that you get a rough picture made up from the information sent to your computer via the net. Once your PC receives that info it sends it ultimately to your GPU(s) to process the info and if you have an AA package on then it will enhance the picture and features before it sends the picture out to your monitor for you to see it.
There are different methods of doing this and that is where the different options come in. FXAA, CMAA, MSAAx4/x8, and SSAA are the different options. They do the enhancement in different ways and if you would like to know more then you can look up the acronyms and what they mean on google searches. If you compare the different methods you might not see that big of a difference and so it really isn't that big of a deal if you keep that low. However, if you don't have lagging when you compare the FXAA low to the SSAAx2+CMAA then you can see a noticable smooth difference. Hopefully, I answered your question fully.