1080p TV for an Xbox 360, Worth Getting?

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Duke_51

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#1 Duke_51
Member since 2008 • 806 Posts

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

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ChubbyGuy40

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#2 ChubbyGuy40
Member since 2007 • 26442 Posts

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

Duke_51

Any fixed pixel display, aka TV this generation, scales all images to fit it's native resolution. So the 720p image would be scaled up to 1080p. It stretches the image and kills some of the detail, but it's not deal breaking imo. The 360 supports 1080p output, but so few games use it. I'd get a 1080p to "future proof" the TV, for the next generation of consoles. Most good 32" LCDs that are 1080p are the same price as a 720p plasma. I'd take the plasma anyday unless I was in a really small bedroom.

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Winaragon

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#3 Winaragon
Member since 2007 • 48 Posts

I thought the 360 only supported 720pDuke_51

no no no and no, it fully supports 1080p incase you have one.

btw, if you're buying a tv with size around 32" i'll recommend to purchase a 720p plasma like ChubbyGuy40 said. Believe me, i own one at home, that you'd only notice the differences between 720p and 1080p when you had a bigger-sized tv or your eyes got over-sensitive xD.

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Duke_51

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#4 Duke_51
Member since 2008 • 806 Posts

[QUOTE="Duke_51"]

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

ChubbyGuy40

Any fixed pixel display, aka TV this generation, scales all images to fit it's native resolution. So the 720p image would be scaled up to 1080p. It stretches the image and kills some of the detail, but it's not deal breaking imo. The 360 supports 1080p output, but so few games use it. I'd get a 1080p to "future proof" the TV, for the next generation of consoles. Most good 32" LCDs that are 1080p are the same price as a 720p plasma. I'd take the plasma anyday unless I was in a really small bedroom.

Well, I am in a pretty small bedroom, I have just enough room to fit my bed, my TV and my computer in here... I suppose a 40" plasma could physically fit in my room, though it might get uncomfortable sitting that close to a TV that big.

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Winaragon

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#5 Winaragon
Member since 2007 • 48 Posts

So just take a 32" 720p plasma then.

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YoungSinatra25

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#6 YoungSinatra25
Member since 2009 • 4314 Posts

So just take a 32" 720p plasma then.

Winaragon
As of now 2010 I'm not aware of any company that makes any Plasmas under 40".. They have been produced as small as 37" (I know of at least a Vizio) but they're generally marketed at the big screen guys. 42" 720p Panni or Sammy and your good. Its my next purchase. The Panni's have the edge in PQ and lower power consumption, while the Sammy's are thinner lighter and have more features and inputs.
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Kleeyook

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#8 Kleeyook
Member since 2008 • 5213 Posts
Umm. Don't u want to use your HDTV for another purpose besides playing 360 on it?
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ATLReppa770

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#9 ATLReppa770
Member since 2005 • 4208 Posts

Get a 1080P TV. In the long run, it'll save you money, as you're future-proofing yourself. ... Even though 1200p, 1600p, etc. will eventually come. But that's probably not for another 3 to 5 years.

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Duke_51

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#10 Duke_51
Member since 2008 • 806 Posts

Umm. Don't u want to use your HDTV for another purpose besides playing 360 on it?Kleeyook
No, not really. If I really wanted to I guess I could hook the cable box up to it...

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shawty1984

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#11 shawty1984
Member since 2007 • 938 Posts

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

Duke_51



The Xbox 360 can and does 1080p native for movies (HD DVD player) and games. BUT very few games are native 1080p, a lot do upscale to 1080p, but this is not the same. For future proofing (as much as you can) I would go with 1080p.

And 1080p at that size and distance is fine and will look betetr than a 720p set (if the 1080p set is decent. All though this depends on what you are viewing.

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shawty1984

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#12 shawty1984
Member since 2007 • 938 Posts

[QUOTE="Duke_51"]

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

ChubbyGuy40

Any fixed pixel display, aka TV this generation, scales all images to fit it's native resolution. So the 720p image would be scaled up to 1080p. It stretches the image and kills some of the detail, but it's not deal breaking imo. The 360 supports 1080p output, but so few games use it. I'd get a 1080p to "future proof" the TV, for the next generation of consoles. Most good 32" LCDs that are 1080p are the same price as a 720p plasma. I'd take the plasma anyday unless I was in a really small bedroom.



Scalling and stretiching are two toally different things. You would know about it if the TV was stretching your image, it would look horrible.

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deactivated-57ad0e5285d73

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#13 deactivated-57ad0e5285d73
Member since 2009 • 21398 Posts

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

Duke_51

I always suggest a 1080p set, as long as its a quality one. It just opens up more options: better as a separate monitor, blu ray, and future consoles/pc gaming--better on a quality 1080p. However, if it is JUST for 360, a true 720p set(not 768p, as is often the case) can produce the best visuals. Also, as i've recently discovered, the 360 actually does NOT produce true 1080p, in any case.

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Urworstnhtmare

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#14 Urworstnhtmare
Member since 2008 • 2630 Posts

Get a 1080P TV. In the long run, it'll save you money, as you're future-proofing yourself. ... Even though 1200p, 1600p, etc. will eventually come. But that's probably not for another 3 to 5 years.

ATLReppa770

Hopefully after 1080p well go straight to this:

Ulta High Definition

Yes. Thats 4320p or 7,680 × 4,320 pixels.

:shock:

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shawty1984

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#15 shawty1984
Member since 2007 • 938 Posts

[QUOTE="Duke_51"]

So I was looking in the market to maybe make the switch to an HDTV (after years of playing with a crappy 27" set from like, the 80's), and was wondering, is a 1080p TV worth getting if it's only going to be used to play games on a 360? I ask this because I thought the 360 only supported 720p, so would a 1080p television set have to scale the picture down to 720p? Is it even worth going with a 1080p TV set if it's only going to be used for playing Xbox games?

I should also mention that I'm looking for a size around 32", as I only sit around 4-5 feet away from the TV. Would a 1080p TV even be noticably different from a 720p on a screen of this size and distance this far away? Any help would be appreciated, thanks.

Heirren

I always suggest a 1080p set, as long as its a quality one. It just opens up more options: better as a separate monitor, blu ray, and future consoles/pc gaming--better on a quality 1080p. However, if it is JUST for 360, a true 720p set(not 768p, as is often the case) can produce the best visuals. Also, as i've recently discovered, the 360 actually does NOT produce true 1080p, in any case.



The Xbox 360 can and does native 1080p for movies (HD DVD) and games. It's just not many games are native 1080p but nit can do it and there are already games out there that are native 1080p.

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rastan

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#16 rastan
Member since 2003 • 1405 Posts
At 5' on a 32" TV 1080p makes absolutely no difference to 720p. I wish everyone would check out the Carlton-Bale chart that displays the maximum distance anybody with 20/20 vision can see the difference between 720p/1080p for a set sized display. Here's the link: http://s3.carltonbale.com/resolution_chart.html The only "future-proofing" a 1080p set of this size would give you is if you ever plan on sitting closer than 4' from the TV and feed it a true 1080p source. If you want to pay more for a TV with better contrast, color, refresh rate, processing, etc then those things would at least be perceptible. The 40" plasma would give you some of these benefits and it shouldn't be too big. In fact if yiou want to see 1080p on a 40" set then 5' is where you would sit to be able to see 1080p.
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willx10121013

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#17 willx10121013
Member since 2004 • 300 Posts

At 5' on a 32" TV 1080p makes absolutely no difference to 720p. rastan

If i'm reading that chart right, at 5' and a 32" that is in the "Benifit of 1080p starts to become noticable" range, while he wouldn't really see the "full benifit" of 1080p until he hit the 40" mark at 5'

although my suggestion is to get a 720p set if ALL your going to do is use your 360 on it, looking around there aren't really any notable games that support native 1080p anyway, but if your planning to watch HD movies or TV on the set also, then i'd suggest a 1080p model

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dontshackzmii

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#18 dontshackzmii
Member since 2009 • 6026 Posts

get a 1080p during all the haliday sales . Its way better and future proof. there will be way more 1080p games next gen .

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rastan

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#19 rastan
Member since 2003 • 1405 Posts
Again, 1080p is not future proof. Also if you don;t sit close enough to it, you are paying more for no reason when you can put that extra money towards a better set and get better quality now and in the future. By the way, TV is 720 or 1080i. Only Blu-Ray is native 1080p for most of its content. 1080p is way better with 1080p sources, but only if you sit close enough to see it. I have a 96" front projection setup and when comparing a 720p Panasonic projector vs a 1080p Panasonic projector at 12 feet away, it is noticeable if you look closely, but not so noticeable that you think you are missing anything with a solid 720p picture. Be a smart shopper and don't just fall for marketing specs. The overall quality of a TV is more important than some single specification. Native contrast, color accuracy, processing, and off-axis viewing are all more important than 720p/1080p differences in overall picture quality.
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#20 blacktorn
Member since 2004 • 8299 Posts
Absolutley not,if u want watch blu-ray then get one,if just a 360 you will be wasting money investing money in a 1080p set because only like 4 games on the 360 support 1080p and there not Any AAA titles and also there are a number of games that are below 720p so just get a 720p set and ur good for 5 years.
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#21 xialon
Member since 2007 • 593 Posts

With that size of a TV and the distance you are playing at, you should go with the 720p.

The highest resolution that the 360 can put out is 720p, however, getting a 1080p will not show you any true difference in gaming.

Save your money and stick wit the 720p in my honest opinion. I have a PS3, and I am content with my 720p 32" LCD. The quality is not all that big of a difference to me.

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shawty1984

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#22 shawty1984
Member since 2007 • 938 Posts

With that size of a TV and the distance you are playing at, you should go with the 720p.

The highest resolution that the 360 can put out is 720p, however, getting a 1080p will not show you any true difference in gaming.

Save your money and stick wit the 720p in my honest opinion. I have a PS3, and I am content with my 720p 32" LCD. The quality is not all that big of a difference to me.

xialon



The Xbox 360 can output native 1080p forMovies (HD DVD) and games.

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ChubbyGuy40

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#23 ChubbyGuy40
Member since 2007 • 26442 Posts

[QUOTE="xialon"]

With that size of a TV and the distance you are playing at, you should go with the 720p.

The highest resolution that the 360 can put out is 720p, however, getting a 1080p will not show you any true difference in gaming.

Save your money and stick wit the 720p in my honest opinion. I have a PS3, and I am content with my 720p 32" LCD. The quality is not all that big of a difference to me.

shawty1984



The Xbox 360 can output native 1080p forMovies (HD DVD) and games.

HD-DVD is a dead format.

Very few 360 games can even output 1080p. If they can, they look like crap.

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shawty1984

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#24 shawty1984
Member since 2007 • 938 Posts

[QUOTE="shawty1984"]

[QUOTE="xialon"]

With that size of a TV and the distance you are playing at, you should go with the 720p.

The highest resolution that the 360 can put out is 720p, however, getting a 1080p will not show you any true difference in gaming.

Save your money and stick wit the 720p in my honest opinion. I have a PS3, and I am content with my 720p 32" LCD. The quality is not all that big of a difference to me.

ChubbyGuy40



The Xbox 360 can output native 1080p forMovies (HD DVD) and games.

HD-DVD is a dead format.

Very few 360 games can even output 1080p. If they can, they look like crap.



Bad reply.

I never once said it was not a dead format or the games looked good. I said the Xbox 360 was capable of native 1080p through movies on the HD DVD format and for some games.

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MazehcS0ul

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#25 MazehcS0ul
Member since 2009 • 1773 Posts

Needs a HDMI cable to get 1080p, but most video games today are made in 720p.

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ChubbyGuy40

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#26 ChubbyGuy40
Member since 2007 • 26442 Posts

Needs a HDMI cable to get 1080p, but most video games today are made in 720p.

MazehcS0ul

You can do 1080p over VGA cables.

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don464

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#28 don464
Member since 2007 • 41 Posts

[QUOTE="MazehcS0ul"]

Needs a HDMI cable to get 1080p, but most video games today are made in 720p.

ChubbyGuy40

You can do 1080p over VGA cables.

yes you can but a hdmi cable makes it look way better than a vga cable...

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ChubbyGuy40

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#29 ChubbyGuy40
Member since 2007 • 26442 Posts

[QUOTE="ChubbyGuy40"]

[QUOTE="MazehcS0ul"]

Needs a HDMI cable to get 1080p, but most video games today are made in 720p.

don464

You can do 1080p over VGA cables.

yes you can but a hdmi cable makes it look way better than a vga cable...

Why res the dead thread/necro it? And no HDMI doesn't magically make things look better like that. It's the same 1080p signal, sent via analog instead of Digital and lacks audio of course.