Cubbies Phan Posted April 26, 2001 Share Posted April 26, 2001 Hi, I've got a Geforce 2 GTS 64MB DDR and I can't figure out how you enable FSAA in D3D mode. The options are available through the OpenGL settings, but not the D3D settings. Does enabling it in OpenGL enact it for D3D applications? Thanks for any help. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Schrullenhaft Posted April 26, 2001 Share Posted April 26, 2001 Which driver are you using - an NVidia Reference driver or a manufacturer supplied driver ? What OS are you running ? The following sequence comes from a GeForceMX installation in Windows 2000 (with Reference driver v.6.50): Go to Start Menu > Control Panel > Display control panel > Settings tab > Advanced button > GeForce2 MX tab (yours will probably vary) > Additional Properties button > Direct 3D Settings tab > More Direct 3D button > Antialiasing tab > "Force antialiasing in all applications" check box - check it. This may help with text if you're running Windows 2000. There should be a slider on this tab that you can adjust. Adjusting to the left lowers/disabled FSAA and to the right increases the level of FSAA. Depending on the version of the drivers you have installed and your OS; the previous sequence may deviate from what is installed on your machine (tab names, etc.). [ 04-25-2001: Message edited by: Schrullenhaft ] 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cubbies Phan Posted April 26, 2001 Author Share Posted April 26, 2001 <BLOCKQUOTE>quote:</font><HR>Originally posted by Schrullenhaft: Which driver are you using - an NVidia Reference driver or a manufacturer supplied driver ? What OS are you running ? The following sequence comes from a GeForceMX installation in Windows 2000 (with Reference driver v.6.50): Go to Start Menu > Control Panel > Display control panel > Settings tab > Advanced button > GeForce2 MX tab (yours will probably vary) > Additional Properties button > Direct 3D Settings tab > More Direct 3D button > Antialiasing tab > "Force antialiasing in all applications" check box - check it. This may help with text if you're running Windows 2000. There should be a slider on this tab that you can adjust. Adjusting to the left lowers/disabled FSAA and to the right increases the level of FSAA. Depending on the version of the drivers you have installed and your OS; the previous sequence may deviate from what is installed on your machine (tab names, etc.). [ 04-25-2001: Message edited by: Schrullenhaft ]<HR></BLOCKQUOTE> Thanks, every path you said was there. I just missed the Anti-Aliasing tab under that More Direct 3D Button. DOH! *slaps forehead* 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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