Some Assassin's Creed Mirage players are frustrated with a graphical effect called chromatic aberration and Ubisoft not including a means to turn it off.
First step after installing a new game: disable Chromatic aberration, lens flare, film grain, motion blur.
Also:
Set FOV to something more inline with my screen and position.
Shitty console ports have this locked in, usually to a very low value that might make sense when you play from the couch but too low when playing in another setup.
First step after installing a new game: disable Chromatic aberration, lens flare, film grain, motion blur.
Also:
Set FOV to something more inline with my screen and position.
Shitty console ports have this locked in, usually to a very low value that might make sense when you play from the couch but too low when playing in another setup.
I don't understand why these games keep including "movie like" features. They're video games, not movies.
Even in movies they don't want those things, you know how expensive true apochromatic lenses are? Meanwhile games are adding lens defects in. -_-
It's getting better.
I got a PS5 as my first console in over a decade and most new PS5 games have the options you listed
There's still older ones tho where theres literally just a single toggle or not even that.