Interesting. I have MOH WF, yet ain't touched the SP or MP.
How you tried the SW:BF MP mode w/ the machines?
Yes, it's a lot of fun. Had to escape Vader a few times too! haha When a player gets to play as Vader he's unbelievably tough! He can be killed but he's pretty damn resilient to blaster fire.
You must be enjoying this.
So, I'd guess most games are for you running at 60FPS?
What res' you running most games at? 1080p? 1440p? 2160p (AKA 4K)?
As a matter of fact I'm running at 144Hz
My monitor is the Asus VG278QE 144Hz Full HD 1080p. I can run 4K with Nvidia's DSR feature (downsampling) but I generally prefer not to. I've had this monitor for a while but I've never been able to take advantage of any rate higher than 60Hz because of HDMI and hardware limitations. It's a 3D Ready monitor but I don't have a 3D sensor or anything. Still, the advantage of a 3D Ready is the refresh rate! It has to have a minimum 120Hz capability.
I've always been baffled by the whole 60Hz thing being the desirable framerate when in the old days on my CRT anything below 85Hz was an eyesore. Granted on a CRT the refresh rate was the main factor, whereas on flat panels it's response time and there is no tube blasting at your face. Still, in terms of framerate it's the exact same thing.
60 frames per second (fps) is visibly inferior to what I generally prefer; for example
Batman Arkham Knight allows a maximum framerate of 90fps and there is a clear difference when I compare it with the 60fps and 30fps modes. The average human eye generally can't see anything faster than approximately 90-100Hz; with training this can actually improve e.g. fighter pilots have been recorded spotting 1/255th of a frame. Anyone who says there's no visible difference at 30 fps needs to have their eyes and/or nervous system checked, or they could just be old.
Now, without veering off on a tangent, playing games at 144Hz is phenomenal. Arguably more exciting for me than running 4K resolution. The first advantage is of course since the framerate is unlikely to reach that high (it does in some instances) you never need to turn on vsync since your screen's response is faster than the framerate, so no more screen tearing! There are a few exceptions with certain games that have not been properly optimized but with some tweaking the tearing can be avoided.
The second advantage is the smoothness. It is just incredible. In fact, this smoothness is not just in games; perusing Windows is smoother and new Windows 10 animations are so fluid. Moving the mouse feels different too because the screen is more in sync with my gaming mouse's rate.
I am considering a 1440p monitor but now the main feature I won't compromise is 144Hz. I can accept 120Hz but anything less I just won't buy anymore. Which is probably why I suffer so much at my office when I'm glued to an inferior screen.
If anyone here is looking to invest in a new screen, I highly recommend checking your hardware to make sure you can run 120Hz and then go for a 120/144Hz monitor.