October 24, 20187 yr Well, not really surprising, no? That's Why there is a number describing this relation pretty well, it is called pixel density. The higher the Pixel density, the less likely aliasing and shimmering is visible. A 4K 27" display has a pixel density of 163 PPI, while the 43" variant only has 102 PPI. My 27" 1440p Screen for example has a PPI of 108, this basically means I have even a slightly higher pixel density than 4K on 43". Greetings, Chris AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D, 2x32GB DDR5 6000MT/s RAM, MSI RTX 4090 Ventus 3X, Windows 11 Home, MSFS2024
October 24, 20187 yr I can concur with the general direction of observations. After much experimentation my 28" 4K monitor requires an in sim 4x MSAA and FXAA on to maximize the screen smoothness ay my monitor's optimal 3840x2160. Anything above is marginal in terms of object edge smoothing and not worth the slight performance loss. I can turn off AA in sim completely but only with FXAA on otherwise there are jagged edges. Edited October 24, 20187 yr by ShezA Shez Ansari Windows 11; CPU: Intel Core i7-8700K; GPU: EVGA GEFORCE GTX 1080Ti 11GB; MB: Gigabyte Z370 AORUS Gaming 5; RAM: 16GB; HD: Samsung 960 Pro 512GB SSD, Samsung 850 Pro 256GB SSD; Display: ASUS 4K 28", Asus UHD 26"
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