

Personally I tend towards the Z-buffer mode in most cases though. – Often annoying artifacts (misplaced shaders/reflections, effects/ui at wrong depth etc.) – Slow (roughly half the speed of the Z-Buffer mode) – Some artifacts due the 3d creation (mostly less annoying then the geometry 3d artifacts)


+ Very fast (almost twice as fast), 60Hz almost guaranteed (very important on the Rift) In all games that support both modes you can easily switch between them on-the-fly, making it easy to compare them.īoth methods have their pros & cons, what you like better will definitely be a matter of taste, and might even differ from game to game. The main mode is a fast Z-buffer based reconstruction, the second mode is geometry based 3d that renders two distinct views (not available for all games so far). New research from Nationwide Children’s Hospital shows that around 1. VorpX supports two different modes to create a 3d effect. Cotton Swabs Send Thousands of Kids to the ER Every Year. All other games work as perfectly as they ever did. Just in case anyone wonders :) : This does only apply to the few games that did not have headtracking until now. But in all games I tried so far it’s definitely better than no headtracking at all. How good this works depends on how a particular racing game handles head rotation internally, so it’s not always as perfect as in shooters or other games that support mouselook. That has changed! vorpX now has headtracking for most Codemasters racing games and various other titles that don’t support looking around with the mouse. Some of you have noticed that various racing games in the published games list did not support headtracking.
