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Originally Posted by msdmoney
I felt the same way, I played PGR3 recently and it was a rough transition going from racing with insane speed and crazy powerslides, to doing cone challenges on confined race courses.
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Originally Posted by boredsilly
That's why I don't really play sim racers anymore. I loved Gran Turismo back in the day, but now those races feel a lot like work to me. Same reason why I've stopped playing most RPGs.
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Originally Posted by Decker
Yes, they will. You have 30 days to PM (and that includes promotions like this) or to return the product for full refund. You'll have no problem as long as you have your receipt.
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Originally Posted by Lastblade
PGR series is not sim racer.
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Originally Posted by Lastblade
PGR series is not sim racer.
It's like playing Ridge Racer with Gran Turismo controls. :lol: |
I would say PGR4 is more sim-oriented than PGR3. Plus, PGR4 has broken out the Arcade and Career modes more than in PGR3. The career mode seems less dependent on Kudos to finish challenges. Your motivation to get Kudos is to buy more stuff.
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Originally Posted by brianluvdvd
Jesus Christ...how many console skus does Microsoft want on the market???
http://www.hdtvmagazine.com/news/200...soft_launc.php |
deleting games as you are done playing them. They are a quick download if you want to replay titles.
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Okay, I have a question regarding using the 360 as a dvd player.
I hooked up my HD add-on the other day & HD discs look great. I then popped in a standard dvd to see what it would look like. Please note that I am running my Xbox thru component cables as my HDTV does not have HDMI. The first thing I noticed was the black screen changed to a much lighter black screen. It did this when it was done loading the standard dvd and started to run it (the black screen you get and then the copyright message ). It looks almost green it is illuminated so much. I checked some HD-dvds and the black stays black. No illumination. I put the standard dvd in the Xbox itself and it did the exact same thing. I then put a game in and the black stayed black. What would be causing this? I hooked my trusty old Denon back up and the screen stayed black. No illumination. I thought maybe it was a setting or something but I tried it in the same inputs on the TV as the 360 was using. I was looking forward to just having one dvd/hd player and not having a couple of players hooked up. I found the hidden/confusing setting for the better sound on the HD 360 player (choose DTS instead of just DD5.1 even though there are no DTS HD discs right now). So am I missing a setting for picture? It seems like it is doing this when it is adjusting the picture from 1080i down to 480p. Anyone else come across this or checked this? It's not a huge deal but it lightens up the blacks so much that it can really affect the picture quality. |
Sorry I can't help you, but this is the main reason why i am still holding off on the add-on. I don't have a 360 with HDMI, and my TV doesn't accept 1080p via component, so I would be watching discs in 720p, the same as my upconverting player.
Plus i don't want to start an expensive addiction to buying more movies... :lol: |
That is odd... but you do know that even the HD-DVD player won't upconvert regular DVDs over component, right? You might as well use the regular 360 slot if that comes out better, for whatever odd reason.
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Originally Posted by fujishig
That is odd... but you do know that even the HD-DVD player won't upconvert regular DVDs over component, right? You might as well use the regular 360 slot if that comes out better, for whatever odd reason.
I also understand that no player upconverts over component. |
Originally Posted by Decker
Yes, they will. You have 30 days to PM (and that includes promotions like this) or to return the product for full refund. You'll have no problem as long as you have your receipt.
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Here is a couple shots I took from my HD-DVD add on. I played the SD and HD sides of the disc in the HD player. Black Level in the 360 display settings is set to Extended. TV is a 65" Mits RPTV. Colors look basically the same too me.
SD - 480p http://img100.imageshack.us/img100/9...7091wb6.th.jpg HD - 1080i http://img84.imageshack.us/img84/960...7092ay2.th.jpg |
I noticed the difference in black levels too. I thought it was just that HD-DVD makes regular DVD look bad. In other words, I thought regular DVD always had brighter blacks, but I never noticed it until I got used to watching HD-DVDs.
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Originally Posted by Gromit
I noticed the difference in black levels too. I thought it was just that HD-DVD makes regular DVD look bad. In other words, I thought regular DVD always had brighter blacks, but I never noticed it until I got used to watching HD-DVDs.
Don't get me wrong...the black in HD is far superior to the black on my original dvd player. But the heavily lit black on the 360 for standard dvd is just too bright too not ask about. |
Originally Posted by brianluvdvd
I thought so too until I hooked my old dvd player back up and found that was not the case.
Don't get me wrong...the black in HD is far superior to the black on my original dvd player. But the heavily lit black on the 360 for standard dvd is just too bright too not ask about. Is it bad on both the 360 drive and the HD-DVD drive? I started using the HD-DVD drive when I watch any DVD so it's been a while since I played a movie on the 360 itself. |
Taken from xbox.com
Reference Level or Black Level: If you're using the Xbox 360 Component HD AV Cable, the Xbox 360 VGA HD AV Cable, or the Xbox 360 HDMI Cable, then screen format options include Reference Level. The default setting, Standard, delivers the normal range of white and black levels that your TV or monitor supports. Select Intermediate to increase the level of white and black in the video output. Select Expanded to maximize black level. Reference level is sometimes used to make a picture sharper, and you can experiment with what format suits your viewing pleasure. If you're using a composite cable, the Xbox 360 VGA HD AV Cable, or the Xbox 360 Component HD AV Cable, then screen format options include Black Level, a setting that applies only in the U.S. and only when the display output is 480i or 480p, such as when watching a DVD. Black level options include Standard, Intermediate, and Extended. |
I had no idea about that. I'm going to have to look into those settings myself.
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My TV's calibrated just fine and everything in 480p (from my stand alone dvd player) and everything in HD from my 360 looks great. But stuff in 480p from my 360 (like BC Xbox games or SD dvds) look all washed out with horrible black/white levels, and I know it's not my TV.
Reference Level or Black Level: If you're using the Xbox 360 Component HD AV Cable, the Xbox 360 VGA HD AV Cable, or the Xbox 360 HDMI Cable, then screen format options include Reference Level. The default setting, Standard, delivers the normal range of white and black levels that your TV or monitor supports. Select Intermediate to increase the level of white and black in the video output. Select Expanded to maximize black level. Reference level is sometimes used to make a picture sharper, and you can experiment with what format suits your viewing pleasure. |
Woah! Thanks edstein! I knew I wasn't going crazy.
Reference Level or Black Level: If you're using the Xbox 360 Component HD AV Cable, the Xbox 360 VGA HD AV Cable, or the Xbox 360 HDMI Cable, then screen format options include Reference Level. The default setting, Standard, delivers the normal range of white and black levels that your TV or monitor supports. Select Intermediate to increase the level of white and black in the video output. Select Expanded to maximize black level. Reference level is sometimes used to make a picture sharper, and you can experiment with what format suits your viewing pleasure. If you're using a composite cable, the Xbox 360 VGA HD AV Cable, or the Xbox 360 Component HD AV Cable, then screen format options include Black Level, a setting that applies only in the U.S. and only when the display output is 480i or 480p, such as when watching a DVD. Black level options include Standard, Intermediate, and Extended. The second part is what interests me of course since the 360 & the HD player look fine when delivering an HD picture. Where do you find this black level setting that is used only with 480i or 480p? |
It's in the the normal 360 display settings area. Same place where you set the resolution output and the aspect ratio.
This is a new feature that was added in the spring dashboard update. |
So are there two settings or just one? If there is just one black setting, how will changing that not affect the HD/game playback? The paragraph you quoted made it sound like their were two different setting...one for HD/games & one for 480i/480p standard dvds.
Like I said, games & HD-dvds look fan and the black level is perfect. I don't want to harm that by changing it just to get standard dvds better. |
Content: Scene It? LCA Demo Price: Free Availability: Not available in Asia Dash Text: [ESRB: T (Teen) BLOOD,LANGUAGE,SUGGESTIVE THEMES,USE OF ALCOHOL,USE OF TOBACCO,VIOLENCE] From the makers of the DVD-based board game comes Scene It? Lights, Camera, Action. Size: 619.00 MB |
It is such a travesty that Scene It doesn't have multiplayer through Live.
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