Quake Live Resolution Bugs
1 postsMember, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1Member
If you want Arena to really look the part with high-res textures, as well as bug fixes and UI improvements, grab High Quality Quake. Then there’s the great CPMA, which came out in 2000 and is. PGL Quake Champions Open: 1: 3 rapha: $10,000 2017-08-26 3rd: Tier 1: Quake World Championship 2017: Duel: 2: 1 DaHanG: $30,000 2011-01-23 1st: Tier 1: Intel Extreme Masters Season V - European Championship Finals: 3: 0 av3k: $4,000 2010-08-15 2nd: Tier 1: QuakeCon 2010: Intel Quake Live Masters Championship: 2: 3 Cypher: $7,500. Mamp pro 4 3.
Quake Live Resolution Bug Video
I'm going to be as detailed as possible here. Just built a new gaming PC and a separate dedicated streaming PC. All up and running flawlessly. Have streamed a little Quake Live and other nonsense without a hitch. Built these for Destiny 2 primarily. Used to compete in Q3 years ago but have been away from PC gaming for quite some time. Play BF1 on console and so I downloaded it from Origins last night to get some keyboard/mouse practice in before D2 beta hits. And here is where I have run into trouble.
I do not have an option to change resolution and refresh rate any greater than 1920x1080p at 144Hz in game. I can lower the resolution all day long in game; however, 1920x1080p @ 144Hz is my final option in the game. This means that the game is running, beautifully mind u, in a letterboxed window on my main monitor at 1080p and 144Hz.
Here are my specs and how everything is setup. Running dual monitors (Dell Gaming S2417DG x2) at 2560x1440 @144Hz. Second monitor is a duplication of primary monitor. As stated earlier everything works flawlessly in current setup except for this one issue in BF1. The gaming PC is as follows: 7700k with 1080Ti on a Maximus IX MB with 32GB DDR4 3000. EVGA 850 Gold+, Corsair H100i v2. No overclocking at this point. Runs at a steady 31C on normal load and up to 42C when stressed. DIsplayPort from 1080Ti to main display. HDMI from 1080Ti to Elgato HD60 Pro installed on streaming PC.
So any ideas why I don't have an option in game to increase my resolution to 2560x1440? Any help is greatly appreciated.
I do not have an option to change resolution and refresh rate any greater than 1920x1080p at 144Hz in game. I can lower the resolution all day long in game; however, 1920x1080p @ 144Hz is my final option in the game. This means that the game is running, beautifully mind u, in a letterboxed window on my main monitor at 1080p and 144Hz.
Here are my specs and how everything is setup. Running dual monitors (Dell Gaming S2417DG x2) at 2560x1440 @144Hz. Second monitor is a duplication of primary monitor. As stated earlier everything works flawlessly in current setup except for this one issue in BF1. The gaming PC is as follows: 7700k with 1080Ti on a Maximus IX MB with 32GB DDR4 3000. EVGA 850 Gold+, Corsair H100i v2. No overclocking at this point. Runs at a steady 31C on normal load and up to 42C when stressed. DIsplayPort from 1080Ti to main display. HDMI from 1080Ti to Elgato HD60 Pro installed on streaming PC.
So any ideas why I don't have an option in game to increase my resolution to 2560x1440? Any help is greatly appreciated.
Comments
- 1332 postsMember, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1MemberAny strange reason the resolution could have been lowered to 1080p? Check the Nvidia control panel & the settings in the monitor itself. I run the same monitor but the 27' version.
- 1 postsMember, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1MemberAny strange reason the resolution could have been lowered to 1080p? Check the Nvidia control panel & the settings in the monitor itself. I run the same monitor but the 27' version.
Oh yeah, done that. I even checked second monitor in case it is trying to view that monitor as the primary, which of course was highly unlikely anyway. It should still be giving me the option for 4K and 1440 even if I didn't have a monitor capable of running those resolutions. I'm at a loss. - 1332 postsMember, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1MemberAre you using a user cfg or anything that may have the resolution set in it?
- 1868 postsMember, Battlefield 3, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1, CTE, BF1IncursionsAlpha, Battlefield VMemberAugust 16, 2017 4:03PMedited August 2017
Disconnect the other screen just to see if it resolves. After that you know you need to mess with the nvidia/monitor outputs. - 817 postsMember, Battlefield 3, Battlefield 4, Battlefield Hardline, Battlefield, Battlefield 1, BF1IncursionsAlpha, Battlefield VMember0
- 1868 postsMember, Battlefield 3, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1, CTE, BF1IncursionsAlpha, Battlefield VMembercan HDMI do 1440p @ 144hz?
Good point. - 442 postsMember, Battlefield 3, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1, Battlefield VMemberAugust 17, 2017 12:38AMedited August 2017The max resolution that can pass through the elgato is 1920x1080 @ 60Hz and you have the resolutions duplicated. Does the problem still occur if you remove the capture device??0
- 1332 postsMember, Battlefield 4, Battlefield, Battlefield 1MemberAugust 17, 2017 2:04AMedited August 2017can HDMI do 1440p @ 144hz?
hdmi can't do 144hz. It can do 1440p though. & yes Violent Rumble is correct that capture card is only good for maximum of 1080p at 60hz.
To use commands and variables, you need to either add them to suitable configuration files (i.e: autoexec.cfg) or enter them into the in-game console.
How configuration files work:
Quake Live uses the following configuration files:
- - repconfig.cfg: this auto-generated file contains all of your key bindings and preference settings (never manually edit this file!)
- - qzconfig.cfg: this auto-generated file contains other settings not listed in the repconfig (never manually edit this file!)
- - autoexec.cfg: a user-generated file. When this exists, the game automatically applies all the settings contained in it to your repconfig when the game loads.
Any other configuration files will need to be loaded in-game using the ‘exec <config name>’ command in the console, unless the config file is already loaded by the autoexec.
Configuration files use the ‘.cfg’ file extension and are essentially basic text files which can be edited with a program such as WordPad. Never use Notepad for editing as it may format the file incorrectly and the game will not be able to read it.
How to reset your game settings:
Delete your repconfig.cfg and qzconfig.cfg (autoexec.cfg too if it exists), reset your settings from the site, and reload the game. You will have brand new configurations generated.
“The game won’t save my settings, what do I do?”
This is a common issue with the game in recent times. To solve this problem, you should load the game and change your settings as you wish, then type writeconfig autoexec in the console to save your settings. If you do this every time you change any settings then your settings will be saved. Alternatively, you could manually edit your autoexec.cfg in WordPad.
How to access your in-game console:
While you’re in-game, press Ctrl+Alt+~ to bring down the console screen. Type com_allowConsole “1” in the console, this will alow you to access the console by simply pressing the tilde (~) key in future.
Auto-complete feature:
To save time typing out commands and variables in the console, press Tab News explorer 1 2 2. while typing to auto-complete it. If there are multiple options, a list of these options will be printed to the console. This feature also works for map names.
Scrolling through the console entries:
Press PgUp to scroll up and PgDn to scroll down when you’re searching for entries through many other entries.
The console is your friend – USE IT!
How to reset your game settings:
Delete your repconfig.cfg and qzconfig.cfg (autoexec.cfg too if it exists), reset your settings from the site, and reload the game. You will have brand new configurations generated.
“The game won’t save my settings, what do I do?”
This is a common issue with the game in recent times. To solve this problem, you should load the game and change your settings as you wish, then type writeconfig autoexec in the console to save your settings. If you do this every time you change any settings then your settings will be saved. Alternatively, you could manually edit your autoexec.cfg in WordPad.
How to access your in-game console:
While you’re in-game, press Ctrl+Alt+~ to bring down the console screen. Type com_allowConsole “1” in the console, this will alow you to access the console by simply pressing the tilde (~) key in future.
Auto-complete feature:
To save time typing out commands and variables in the console, press Tab News explorer 1 2 2. while typing to auto-complete it. If there are multiple options, a list of these options will be printed to the console. This feature also works for map names.
Scrolling through the console entries:
Press PgUp to scroll up and PgDn to scroll down when you’re searching for entries through many other entries.
The console is your friend – USE IT!