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there is a function to prevent screen tearing, named vsync.
And thanks for the reply, i just made my choice for a monitor, the ASUS VN247H.
As for the difference. There isn't much. differenc for most appliucations. Unless you're doing motion graphics and film editing. You might notice an increased smoothness but there's a reason many montors cap at 60, the ability for the human eye to the perceive the difference between 60 and 90fps is greatly limited in short, there's not that much difference to the eyes.
The frame rate issue comes up because some games use display timing for then input timing as well.
Even for desktop, the difference is clear. Just the mouse cursor smoothness is extremely nice to look at, compared to 60hz i have been using before.
But ofc the actual games at 144 hz is the main reason i upgraded and thats where the difference is most noticeable. Doesn't even need to be fast first person shooters either. Even 2d top down sprite based games benefit clearly from high frame rate. Because things still scroll on the screen and high refresh rate makes it very smooth.
As long as the system can keep up. Peaking well above 60 FPS, your system would do fine on a 120 / 144 Hz display. Once you do it, 60Hz screens will probably make your eyes bleed.
At 180fps a 60Hz monitor will display 3 partial frames with Vsync disabled.
Most monitors have an effective horizontal sync of 64,000 Hz.
Yes, 64 KHz, so having Vsync off with triple buffering is the way to go.
A 144Hz monitor will display 2 partial frames at 288fps with Vsync disabled.
Vsync enabled looks better at 85Hz to 144Hz+.
There is also AMD FreeSync and NVIDIA Gsync to check out.
:-)