Jon_Irenicus_PL: Most movies are shot in 24 frames per second, or sometimes 25.
Should you play your video games in 24 FPS to maintain that effect?
I have considered playing my games at 24 FPS, but unfortunately not many titles allow you to set your Vsync to that number.
Do you believe that video games lose their cinematic effect at above 24-25 FPS?
Maybe our video game experiences would be superior in 24 or 25 FPS?
What do you think (without being mean, like someone here previously)?
If for some reason you want to set your games to 24FPS, for some reason - use MSI Afterburner, NVidia Inspector, or NVidia Control Panel...and force it to 24FPS.
You don't need V-Sync to force it to 24fps. Just use a program like I mentioned above and force it there.
Don't know why you'd want to do that & lock it to 24fps, as you should aim for most games at 60fps or better for smoother gameplay, as a bare minimum.
This is gaming, not a movie experience.
Unless it's an old game and/or it was coded for 24fps and going above a certain framerates breaks physics, breaks syncing, breaks animation or whatever - I'd aim for 60fps or better.
Even games like Dark Souls, for example - the Dark Souls PTD Edition (OG PC Edition) on PC was locked at 30fps. At certain times, you could get slapped with a FPS slap to 15fps at say the Ceaseless Discharge Boss or take some nasty performance hits in Blighttown...and it had stutters, slow-downs, and other weirdness....regardless of your video card. Dark Souls Remastered on PC was much better, as it was now revamped & built for 60fps, keeping the game super-smooth, optimized, and eliminated a lot of those foolish slowdowns b/c it wasn't bound by the annoying 30fps cap.
Better yet - for games supporting high framerate, for smoothness purposes, you should aim for all of this:
1. Have a A-Sync method supported on your monitor - either FreeSync or better yet go for G-Sync.
2. Also have a high refresh monitor to go along w/ that - i.e. 90fps, 120fps, 144fps, 240fps, or whatever.
3. Have a good video card - IIRC, you have a RTX 2060, so you should be fine, for now.
By going for G-Sync and high framerates - you can eliminate a lot of the mess w/ input lag, screen tearing, and all of those annoyances.
And for fast-paced action games like say Doom 2016, RAGE 2, and numerous others - they just feel & play better when running all around at say 120fps or more anyways.