You can switch between standard, «CRT filter» (
with scanlines!)
But only by playing on a CRT TV or UltraHDMI N64 (
with the scanline effect turned on) will you truly be able to enjoy the vibrancy and detail of the stage backgrounds.
Not exact matches
Pocket Rumble is so evocative of a specific platform - right on down to the
scanlines - that anyone who owned a Pocket Color is likely overloading
with nostalgia right now.
If you like the way the original Sonic games play, your only decision when it comes to Sonic Mania shouldn't be whether or not it's worth buying, but rather, if you'll play it
with or without the classic CRT
scanlines enabled.
You can choose to have the graphics remain the same as they were back in the «90s
with jagged edges and even
scanlines.
Pocket Rumble is so evocative of a specific platform - right on down to the
scanlines - that anyone who owned a Pocket Color is likely overloading
with nostalgia right now.
By default the games are emulated
with a slight smoothing filter applied, to take the rough edges off the pixels that would have been smoothed out by CRT televisions of old, but you can also run them
with «pixel perfect» emulation if you choose, or else apply a slightly heavy - handed CRT filter for some real
scanline goodness.
You can also boost the brightness, add different types of
scanlines, blur / unblur the pixels, modify the audio, remap which buttons trigger the menu, and tinker
with other A / V things to a much more nuanced degree than you should ever need.
Since the enemies are arranged horizontally, four enemies times four sprites wide means that you end up
with sixteen sprites on a
scanline.