

RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
From what little testing I did, I would say yes. Depends on the game, but both have very, very subtle (but different) artifacts. I only tried them out for a short time though.Strider77 wrote:is the picture different between the 2 units?
RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
Not to one up you either, but I have an RGB modded PC Engine, Super Grafx and Duo RX.GaijinPunch wrote:Not to one up you, but for some dumb reason I have a Duo-R & a Duo-RX both modded. Different mod jobs. Can't decide which one I like better. The cable to the Duo-R is all cocked up though so it's kind of useless at the moment.
Some Japanese and European CRT-based monitor have SCART input for RGB input. The Japanese ones have just RGB in via a 21-pin interface.captpain wrote:So how does this work? Do certain TVs have special inputs called RGB? Please forgive me, I am a noob.
PC-Engine for the lose, eh? Why bother w/ the Super Grafx? You really need to play those 4 games at all?Ceph wrote:
Not to one up you either, but I have an RGB modded PC Engine, Super Grafx and Duo RX.
And yes, playing PC Engine in RGB is awesome. I hate composite.
RegalSin wrote:New PowerPuff Girls. They all have evil pornstart eyelashes.
I used to have my Gamecube connected to a 1084S, until it stopped working. I never knew anything about the difference between composite and RGB though, it was just that I saw the colors on the end of the RCA connectors matched the colors on the back of the monitor...PC Engine Fan X! wrote:Those small but sweet 14" Commodore produced Amiga monitors such as the original 1080, 1084 and the 1084S have a simple DB-9 or similar interface for getting that beatiful RGB signal in. Such low resolution graphics 320 x 240 when playing such arcade PCBs looks great on the Amiga monitors, especially if the RGB signal is adjusted for proper picture and color purity.
Composite Video input and RGB input: a really big difference indeed. I'm surprised that you didn't take advantage of that built-in RGB input on your 1080S monitor. It really makes your gaming truly stand out and you'd never want to go back to using such crappy composite video or the next step up, S-Video (which is better than comp. video anyways).320x240 wrote:I used to have my Gamecube connected to a 1084S, until it stopped working. I never knew anything about the difference between composite and RGB though, it was just that I saw the colors on the end of the RCA connectors matched the colors on the back of the monitor...PC Engine Fan X! wrote:Those small but sweet 14" Commodore produced Amiga monitors such as the original 1080, 1084 and the 1084S have a simple DB-9 or similar interface for getting that beatiful RGB signal in. Such low resolution graphics 320 x 240 when playing such arcade PCBs looks great on the Amiga monitors, especially if the RGB signal is adjusted for proper picture and color purity.
For captpain,captpain wrote:Is there some sort of device that can convert a VGA signal (from a computer) to RGB? Someone is selling a PVM-2530 that "works great" near me for $50, and I'm thinking about getting it....