Yes, it will make 30/60 material duplicated. But I suppose even with the duplications, it might seem โclearerโ to the average person versus a screen with less duplications, but more motion blur.
Personally I would want the ability to choose 60hz for 60fps games, 120hz when interpolating, and flicker-free for movies, since those have baked-in motion-blur anyway.
But I guess most TV manufacturers find it easier to go with a one size fits all approach. They probably believe 120hz to be a good enough tradeoff between flicker and clarity.
Thank you for such a professional reply. According to the conception, for solving motion blur and duplication, Samsung chooses to sync backlight flickering frequency with contentsโ frames per second.
It makes sense while interpolation is activated, but do you have any idea why Samsung still keeps PWM in only 120Hz in most display modes even when interpolation is turning off ? Would it not make a regular 30/60 fps moving content looks duplicated ?
Thank you very much for teaching me a lot.
Thank you for such a professional reply. According to the conception, for solving motion blur and duplication, Samsung chooses to sync backlight flickering frequency with contentsโ frames per second.
It makes sense while interpolation is activated, but do you have any idea why Samsung still keeps PWM in only 120Hz in most display modes even when interpolation is turning off ? Would it not make a regular 30/60 fps moving content looks duplicated ?