Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago
This already exists.
Look for 'IMAGE CROP' setting in the Video preferences. You can toggle the
overscan
area both vertically an horizontally.
Original comment by axe...@gmail.com
on 23 Nov 2009 at 7:22
Hi, thanks for your response.
The image is displaying overscan area already without the cropping option. In
real
Famicom/NES hardware, the overscan area is of a specific color depending on the
game
and even varies during the game itself, and on the emulator it is always colored
black. Not something big at all, it would just make the emulator behave closer
to
real hardware if desired, which I believe would be the ultimate goal.
Original comment by Yuan...@gmail.com
on 24 Nov 2009 at 2:13
No, you are understanding the option the other way around.
Cropping means that it WILL NOT show (CUT) the overscan area. The overscan area
is
shown on the original color the game has it defined. In order to see the
overscan
area set cropping option to OFF.
Original comment by axe...@gmail.com
on 24 Nov 2009 at 3:48
Thanks again for your comment. Cropping will cut the image further to levels
real
hardware doesn't. I have included two pictures, one of original hardware, where
what
is visible of the overscan area is the color of the background, and on the Wii
emulation it is colored black. The emulator settings used were "original" video
mode,
cropping off. I'm not complaining at all, just reporting the overscan border
color is
not the same as in real hardware and there could be the option to have it.
Original comment by Yuan...@gmail.com
on 25 Nov 2009 at 4:31
Attachments:
that just looks like tv overscan from the Wii video output, could be due to
scaling
differences in GX/VI. regardless, this "issue" is minor and neglible. you have
zooming options to adjust if you wish.
Original comment by dborth@gmail.com
on 28 Nov 2009 at 11:44
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
Yuan...@gmail.com
on 18 Nov 2009 at 9:26