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I think he means rerender the game in hd instead of just increased resolution. (Did i make sense?)I thought the Wii U already upscaled Wii games.
It does, but it doesn't render them in 1080p, only 480p, hence the choppiness when playing Wii games.I thought the Wii U already upscaled Wii games.
Choppiness? I'm assuming you mean jagginess / aliasing. Choppiness would be referring to the frame rate, how the game runs.It does, but it doesn't render them in 1080p, only 480p, hence the choppiness when playing Wii games.
Choppiness? I'm assuming you mean jagginess / aliasing. Choppiness would be referring to the frame rate, how the game runs.
Ah, okay.Yeah, thats what I meant
It looks just as bad on the Wii, upscaling a composite / component signal.Ah, okay.
Good thing I still have my Wii.
I don't have a component cable anymore. It got lost.It looks just as bad on the Wii, upscaling a composite / component signal.
Gamepad screen is only 480p i think, so on the Gamepad it looks pretty nativeto be honest, i doubt the upscalining does much, I got one of those Wii HDMI adaptors for my mom's wii cause her tv couldn't use componet cables, and it probably just what it means, Allows video on hdmi cable, I doubt it upscales anything in HD 1080P like it says. The games on wii u in wii mode look just as identical, though on the gamepad it does look good actually. Anyone with eyes sharper than mine may wanna correct me.
Gamepad is 720p last I checked.Gamepad screen is only 480p i think, so on the Gamepad it looks pretty native
Upscaling a 480p composite signal would look horrible on the Wii U in 1080p, upscaling always does look worse than the original quality
But to answer your question right now No, probably not till we get an IOSU exploit
That can't be right, The console is sold as a HD game, it wouldn't make sense for game pad to not be in HD Somehow.Gamepad screen is only 480p i think, so on the Gamepad it looks pretty native