Lag on dbz budokai for dolphin build 5.0 on nvidia shield tv
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Yea... We know that, you mentioned that... Perhaps I should not have stated that this way... It was more like an universal saying (I don't have a NVidia shield, so I don't know which value you need). But what I am trying to say, you should test it yourself. Just start the Dolphin, start with the value 90% for example. Test it and try to lower if needed by 10% again. Just try to understand what the CPU Clock Override function does and that you run a few tests, checking if the value still needs to be lower. The CPU Clock Override is an advanced option, thus it requires some manual finetuning (hence why it is advanced).
07-14-2016, 12:28 AM
(07-13-2016, 09:29 PM)Admentus Wrote: Try and test it yourself. Try out a few combinations. Lower than 100 means lower than normal clock speed. We don't know which value you need, that depends on your hardware and game. 50 for example indicates that your emulating the CPU clock at half speed. This may lower the framerate for the game... Or it may not... Could do weird things. But it lowers the requirements your PC requires. Normally you don't want to be below 100, but in case of weaker hardware it might be useful. Just be aware this does not work equally for every game, games might be programmed in different ways thus changing the clock speed may cause different behaviour for different games. I tried but it's still slow 07-14-2016, 09:29 PM
After setting the overclock to 20%, there's no stutter, but the performance of an emulation is slow. Is there any way to fix a slow emulation in games?
Yes there is, set the CPU overclock higher. What you are basically doing is running that game at 20% of the original CPU Clock speed of the Wii. As I stated earlier, changing the Clock speed may cause weird stuff. There is only so much Dolphin can fix for you before you need better hardware. If you are required to set the CPU Clock speed at 20% then it is an indication you need better hardware. You are using a tablet device here, so don't expect any miracles. Dolphin has harsh requirements. Tablets devices these days are powerful enough to run emulators such as Mupen64, VBA or Snes9x at full speed. Tablets are just not ready for full speed with Dolphin yet. Come back in a few years.
But I could have already told you from the start your tablet wouldn't work out that well. I am not that the NVidia shield is bad or is lacking power, but we are talking emulation here. In fact, as far as I know, there is no consumer tablet on the market powerful enough to run Dolphin maxed out. Certainly don't try to run Xenoblade on a handheld device, it is one of the more demanding games on the Wii... You should try some lightweight games instead. Super Mario Sunshine tends to run quite well from what I heard and seen so far. I would expect Super Smash Brothers. Melee run well too? 07-14-2016, 09:45 PM
(07-14-2016, 09:41 PM)Admentus Wrote: Yes there is, set the CPU overclock higher. What you are basically doing is running that game at 20% of the original CPU Clock speed of the Wii. As I stated earlier, changing the Clock speed may cause weird stuff. There is only so much Dolphin can fix for you before you need better hardware. If you are required to set the CPU Clock speed at 20% then it is an indication you need better hardware. You are using a tablet device here, so don't expect any miracles. Dolphin has harsh requirements. Tablets devices these days are powerful enough to run emulators such as Mupen64, VBA or Snes9x at full speed. Tablets are just not ready for full speed with Dolphin yet. Come back in a few years. I'm using nvidia shield TV, not tablet
Please, don't be that precise... I am just trying to help out. Device. Tablet... It is all the same here, just an universal term. What does it matter... Try to understand my point. Fact is, forgot expecting using your "NVidia Shield TV" (happy?) for full speed emulation. The biggest issue here is that you need to try figuring out on your own for a bit. All we can done here is suggest which options to use and how to improve your experience. In the end, it is entirely up to you to have the proper hardware and set it up yourself correctly. As I said experiment with the suggested options and if it does not work, you're out of luck.
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