I experienced zero bugs, and very
little screen tearing or the like; very clean game.
Not exact matches
Thinking back over those poor actors — speaking the unspeakable while stuffed and mounted on blue
screens absent Creatures To Be Computerized Later — makes me appreciate Naomi Watts»
little vaudeville act (and her
tears) opposite what must have been a bunch of pulleys manned by hairy, leering Kiwis.
Before this device came to my hands, I usually got tired of reading ebooks on the computer
screen after about 30 minutes, as I got «lost» on the text and my eyes began to
tear a
little.
Darksiders has a beautiful, almost comic book art style to it and the gameworld is brought to life by some great designs however the actual graphics themselves are a
little rough around the edges and you will notice some
screen tear etc however they are by no means terrible and Darksiders is a pretty game to look at with some great art designs, though some enemies look a
little under textured and detailed.
It's not quite perfect though - moving into the more graphically complex towns can see some minor drops and a
little tearing at the very top of the
screen, but beyond that, the impact on gameplay is limited to brief moments of stutter that quickly pass.
The comparisons to The Legend of Zelda and what looks to be a page
torn out of the storybook adventure of The Wind Waker were incredibly enticing, but I just didn't want to play it on my iPhone (the
little screen and all).
There's some really nice visuals that are let down a
little by some
screen tearing.
PS3 runs a
little slower than the Xbox game, but doesn't suffer from any
screen tearing whatsoever.
We can talk numbers: it runs at a native 1080p resolution and at 30 frames per second in the campaign, 60 in multiplayer, with not a hint of
screen tear or judder or slowdown, and just a
little texture pop - in.
And, whilst the design doesn't vary greatly throughout the game, the mix in locals from battered urban war settings to dark, fire - lit forests do manage to add a
little variety to
screens full of
torn - limbs and combo score pop - ups.
Top all this satisfaction off with some lovely graphics (frequent nasty
screen tearing though), fierce sound effects, a great soundtrack (some of the music is a
little depressing though) and some decent bonus content, and you have one of the finest games on Sony's third system.
There were the expected framerate and
screen tearing issues, but very
little lag from other players.
Thanks to its Nvidia G - Sync technology, gamers will encounter
little to no
screen tearing or latency.
I went to the address bar in at the top left of
screen and clicked on the
little thingy that looks like a sheet of paper
torn in half?