So firstly bear in mind that the pics you rip from Animal Crossing are tiny in size, I have like 50 pics and I checked, on the SD Card this is less than 8 mbs. So the pics are poor quality to begin with.



Anyhow,  I play Wii on different TVs depending on where I am and I noticed that when you capture AC screens, it takes the pic according to the TV you are using, ratio, size, quality, HD or SD.



SDTV


2yjzpsw.jpg




HDTV


4i0rs.jpg


Notice what HDTV does to the picture? Look at the bird Pave, jaggy, bitty, dull, stretched. Just all around, it adds a significant nastiness. Pay attention to the text in particular, a big giveaway. I've often seen screens of Wii games and funnily enough the good screens are how it looks on an an SDTV and frequently, whoever it is captures bad screens and that is how the game looks on an HDTV. Spooky.



2vcjcz4.jpg


Look at the HUD, the writing and where the money is written in the top right hand corner. See the jaggies on the diving mask or around all the items. Ugh



x3xzc6.jpg


This pic is awful, look at the bird(s) faces. Look at the text! The f-ing text is jaggy!




If you dont play on an SDTV you might even be left with the impression that the system was weaker than GC. What a terrible situation. Until someone gets off their ass and makes a decent mass market external upscaler, as far as I can see the only option is to get one of these fancy Toshiba Regza ZR Tvs, which supposedly upscales any signal coming into it with Resolution + technology.



I have the DVD player with the same tech and it seems to work on DVDs at least.

Posted by gamingeek Sun, 15 Mar 2009 15:34:32 (comments: 23)
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Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:01:58
Just Yar. Like Cher
 
Wed, 03 Mar 2010 13:11:47

http://www.hdtvorg.co.uk/news/articles/2008010501.htm

Best LCD TV's for Standard Definition
Tuesday, 02 February 2010 12:55 UK


While there is nothing to compare with the pristine quality of High Definition pictures on your LCD TV, for most of us, the majority of our viewing schedule will will be in Standard Definition (SD).

Having seen a demonstration of High Definition programmes at their local electrical retailer, many of us have been disappointed when the same TV displays Standard Definition pictures.

The choice of TV is a very personal and often subjective choice and our top ten LCD TV's for Standard Definition represent those screens which in our opinion offer the best combination of price and performance.

We strongly recommend that you compare as many TV's alongside each other with SD and HD material on screen. Any trustworthy retailer will go out of their way to help. It might also be worth noting that;

(i) Viewing distances usually differ with SD and HD for the same screen. HD will invariably be better viewed close, while moving away from the screen will produce better results for SD.

(ii) Ultimately, the picture processing technology employed on a TV will be the single most important factor which determines how good the SD and HD picture is - again, we would like to stress how important it is to compare as many TV's as you can with SD and HD material

The Top ten:

http://www.hdtvorg.co.uk/guide/top_ten_sd_lcd_tv.htm

THE WINNER:

Samsung LE32B450

The LE-32B450's Standard Definition performance undoubtedly benefits from the fact that the human eye perceives on screen detail more uniformly on smaller screens. Despite this, and testament to the effectiveness of DNIe + image processing, the B450's SD performance puts many a high end flat panel TV to shame.

While many flat panel TV's struggle to convert the 576 or so line of Freeview to something resembling a decent on screen picture, Samsung's LE-32B450 had no such troubles. The clarity and sharpness of SD pictures is nothing short of a revelation at this price level. Yes, there is a very small amount of video noise and blurring on the fastest on screen action, but you have to look at paying twice the amount you would on the B450 to even match its performance in this respect.

You will never be able to match the pin sharp realism of 1080p material on a Full HD screen, but the LE-32B450 still impressed with its High Definition (HD) abilities. It is no match for a larger Full HD (1920 x 1080) screen but you do get a level of detail and sharpness that reminds you of what HD material is all about.



 
Thu, 04 Mar 2010 02:40:07
I like how the HD TV has now not just made the graphics worse, but deleted them. Nyaa
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