handamputation wrote:mandelia wrote:Thanks so much for this. I knew these types of commands exist but didn't think I'd find a full guide like this one. On top of it all, I am downsampling to 3200x1800 and injecting antialiasing from Nvidia control panel. WOW looks pretty tight now.
Could you explain the 'injecting antialiasing from Nvidia control panel'? I have a 940m in my Laptop and the Control Panel. Can I do the same thing?
Well it's been several days but I might as well answer, for what it's worth.
The inject AA from the Nvidia control panel, you update your drivers, right-click on the desktop, go the control panel. When you're there, "Adjust image settings with preview," click on "use the advanced 3D image settings." Then, click the blue link beside what which says Take me there. Scroll down to World of Warcraft (wow.exe) or add the program yourself to the list. I set anisotropic filtering to 16x, antialiasing mode to enhance the application setting, and antialiasing transparency to 8x. That should smoothen any jagged edges around models. Note, the Antialiasing - Setting option does nothing. You can set it to Application-controlled after setting Transparency.Here is a pic of my current settings.
https://imgur.com/a/zLXuJ/allZacharybinx34 wrote:mandelia wrote:Thanks so much for this. I knew these types of commands exist but didn't think I'd find a full guide like this one. On top of it all, I am downsampling to 3200x1800 and injecting antialiasing from Nvidia control panel. WOW looks pretty tight now.
How did you setup downsamplling?
Read guides on how to do it. It's the same process for each game. I've done it for several. It can diminish FPS though, so I don't really recommend doing it, unless you have a beast computer.
Zacharybinx34 wrote:Does turning on Ambient Occlusion in the NVidia control panel help things at all for wow?
It does make a different, but it glitches. Not worth turning it on.