(04-03-2011, 03:00 PM)NaturalViolence Wrote: I'm going to assume you have a widescreen monitor since that's a high end setup. Leave pixel lighting, force bi/trilinear filtering, and 3dvision off.Įnable copy and set it to ram. What I have found is that on really powerful devices (in my case an Note 20 Ultra 5G) official dolphin using default settings out of the box performed excellently where as on my Samsung S8+ I have better results using the MMJR Fork using the Vulkan Driver and setting emulated CPU Speed to around 40. Turn on load native mip-maps, efb scaled copy, and pixel depth. There area few spots such as the forsaken fortress where even the most powerful video cards today can't handle it when combined with a high efb scale, and for this game having a high efb scale it more important. At the same time, adjusting game window size and in the settings accessed by clicking the Graphics tab in the main Dolphin menu reducing the display. Set Anisotropic filtering to 16x (it will have no performance hit on that video card).Īnti-aliasing can be set to either 4xSSAA or none depending on where you are. It will produce smoother more fluid video and should not cause problems so long as vps limiting is working properly. Set the aspect ratio to force 16:9 and turn widescreen hack on Set the aspect ratio to stretch to window and leave widescreen hack offĤ. Set the aspect ratio to force 16:9 and leave widescreen hack offģ. Set the aspect ratio to auto and leave widescreen hack offĢ. now the dolphin interface should populate with your games even when you close everything and open dolphin again in game mode. select the folder where you have your iso (ROMS) stored. Have dolphin use a hack to force the game to render in 16:9 (this will cause visual glitches to occur sometimes outside of the normal 4:3 area of the screen space)ġ. What you need to do is the following: open dolphin on desktop mode. Have dolphin stretch to any aspect ratio (so it stretches both the height and width, useful if you have a 16:9 monitor and you don't like having black bars)Ĥ. Have dolphin stretch the 4:3 image to 16:9 (everything will look fat/stretched along the width)ģ. Use these settings it’s the best for General. Have dolphin leave the aspect ratio alone (the image will only fill the center of your widescreen monitor, you'll have black bars on the left and right side of the image)Ģ. How to fix lag on Dolphin Emulator This is the easiest and fastest way to fix lag on Dolphin Emulator Low or High End PC. It is designed to render at a 4:3 aspect ratio. Dolphin is pretty easy to setup compared to older emulators (PS1 emulators were the worst for needing game and sometimes PC specific tweaks to work right), and some other emulators from the same console generation (*cough PCSX2 *cough).I'm going to assume you have a widescreen monitor since that's a high end setup. Also OpenGL will be a good backend since Nvidia doesn't have the same driver performance penalty that AMD does in OpenGL. Ubershaders are nice to use if you want to avoid the lag spikes as Dolphin makes new shaders for a specific game (just stayĪway from synchronous Uberahaders). 99 times out of 100 you should keep most settings default (unless you need to fix a broken game) and if you look up your specific game on the wiki it will let you know if something needs to be on or off (like the few games dual core breaks or the ones that needs some specific frame buffer setting).īesides that for the graphical enhancements you could go very high with you GPU, but really you should probably match your monitor's resolution with the internal resolution and add AA until you like the effect or that specific game slows down.
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