swaaye wrote:Putas wrote:I don't recall anyone using aniso on GeForce before FX because of the performance impact.
It might be more because not many people knew what AF was back then. Some people also sacrifice image quality to get more speed.
I think by far the biggest problem with 8500 is the drivers. NV has a big edge here. The first year of 8500's life was a total mess. Even the final drivers are troublesome though and the card is a bad choice if you want to play older games because there's no fog table support.
Would this work with an 8500?
http://www.ehow.com/how_7524901_enable-fog-ta … -emulation.html
Update Your Drivers
1 Create a Windows restore point. Right-click on the "My Computer" or "Computer" icon on your desktop and select "Properties." Select "System protection" from the menu on the left. Select the disk you wish to back-up -- typically C: -- and click the "Create" button at the bottom of the window. If something goes wrong when you're updating your drivers, you now have a way to restore your computer to its former, working condition.
2 Update your video card drivers automatically. Open the Control Panel and select the "Device Manager" utility. Expand "Display adapters" and find your video card on the list. Right-click it and select "Update Driver Software," then select "Search automatically for updated driver software." If Windows finds a driver update on the Internet, it will install it automatically, then ask you to restart your computer.
3 Update your video card drivers manually if the automatic update doesn't work. Open the Start menu and run the program "dxdiag" to open the DirectX Diagnostic Tool. Click on the "Display" tab to see your video card's manufacturer and the current version of its driver. Visit the manufacturer's website and check that your driver's current version matches the latest version available for download. If it does not, download and install the update from the website. Restart your computer.
Enable Fog Table Emulation
1 Download and install RivaTuner (see Resources). Launch the program; it will create a database of your current registry settings.
2 Click on the arrow next to "Customize..." in the "Driver settings" area of the "Main" tab. Choose "DirectDraw and Direct3D Settings." The "Direct3D tweaks" window will open.
3 Click on the "Compatibility" tab. Check the box for "Enable table fog emulation" under "Compatibility Settings." Direct3D's fog table emulation is now enabled.