F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Using the catalyst control center to force AA and AF

Using the catalyst control center to force AA and AF

Using the catalyst control center to force AA and AF

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pocio77
Posting Freak
783
04-02-2016, 06:31 PM
#1
The process from Nvidia to AMD has been progressing well, though some challenges remain. I can't apply AA settings through the control center regardless of the adjustments I make. It looked simple at first—just add a new 3D program and override the settings—but Max Payne 3 and Sleeping Dogs don’t support AA. I haven’t tested many games yet, but it seems they’re not compatible. Could there be something missing or did I pick the wrong titles? I’m using an R9 290 with the newest 14.4 WHQL drivers.
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pocio77
04-02-2016, 06:31 PM #1

The process from Nvidia to AMD has been progressing well, though some challenges remain. I can't apply AA settings through the control center regardless of the adjustments I make. It looked simple at first—just add a new 3D program and override the settings—but Max Payne 3 and Sleeping Dogs don’t support AA. I haven’t tested many games yet, but it seems they’re not compatible. Could there be something missing or did I pick the wrong titles? I’m using an R9 290 with the newest 14.4 WHQL drivers.

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YuBeOk
Junior Member
11
04-02-2016, 07:28 PM
#2
If you enable AA in the game settings, it might affect how your monitor handles gaming displays. On CCC, turning on AA on the gaming monitor should ensure it stays within the screen's capabilities.
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YuBeOk
04-02-2016, 07:28 PM #2

If you enable AA in the game settings, it might affect how your monitor handles gaming displays. On CCC, turning on AA on the gaming monitor should ensure it stays within the screen's capabilities.

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_Ninguem_
Member
140
04-03-2016, 02:38 AM
#3
FXAA can't be turned off in sleeping dogs, which is frustrating. And AA in Max Payne 3 causes significant input lag. Regardless of the settings I pick in the catalyst control panel—whether global or application-based—it doesn't make a difference. The performance remains unchanged, and the jaggies persist.
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_Ninguem_
04-03-2016, 02:38 AM #3

FXAA can't be turned off in sleeping dogs, which is frustrating. And AA in Max Payne 3 causes significant input lag. Regardless of the settings I pick in the catalyst control panel—whether global or application-based—it doesn't make a difference. The performance remains unchanged, and the jaggies persist.

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Shadow8202
Junior Member
6
04-03-2016, 02:44 AM
#4
Which drivers are available? I've experienced this problem before. After a fresh installation and updated drivers, it functioned again.
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Shadow8202
04-03-2016, 02:44 AM #4

Which drivers are available? I've experienced this problem before. After a fresh installation and updated drivers, it functioned again.

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Benji66
Junior Member
8
04-03-2016, 04:32 AM
#5
I just finished a total new Windows setup about a week back, so I’m not sure this is the problem.
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Benji66
04-03-2016, 04:32 AM #5

I just finished a total new Windows setup about a week back, so I’m not sure this is the problem.

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Whispz
Junior Member
33
04-03-2016, 06:05 AM
#6
You might want to consider an older driver. I think it could be a software issue rather than a hardware problem, though that’s not certain. I’m not very skilled.
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Whispz
04-03-2016, 06:05 AM #6

You might want to consider an older driver. I think it could be a software issue rather than a hardware problem, though that’s not certain. I’m not very skilled.

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Crazy_Heaven
Posting Freak
811
04-03-2016, 06:25 PM
#7
Get Radeon Pro, it's crucial for AMD graphics cards. It lets you bypass all AA and AF settings in every game. http://www.radeonpro.info/
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Crazy_Heaven
04-03-2016, 06:25 PM #7

Get Radeon Pro, it's crucial for AMD graphics cards. It lets you bypass all AA and AF settings in every game. http://www.radeonpro.info/