Greetings,
I have never been a fan of reshade and other forms of postprocessing for contrast, brightness, vibrancy, etc... I find them to be overdone (usually oversaturated) and - more importantly - they create graphical issues in-game and guarantee an FPS drop. I decided to see about implementing an experimental (or beta) feature offered from nVidia GeForce Experience: nVidia Freestyle.
It is essentially a reshade type application, but natively supported by nVidia so everything runs smoothly. It also offers a simpler (albeit more limited) set of options to tweak; however, I have been using it on FIFA 19 on my PC, and I now have contrast levels that are cinematic, highlights and shadows which are accurate, and a color gradient that is linear.
The catch is that Freestyle is only available on supported games. But, if you use nvidia profile inspector you can override the limitation and enable it. Open GeForce Experience, go to settings, and then select to enable experimental features. Next, open nVidia profile inspector, select FIFA 19 from the menu of games, scroll down to the section entitled 'other', and then change the first option (Ansel flags for enabled applications) to 'ANSEL_WHITELISTED_ALLOWED'. When in the game, open the in-game overlay and select game filters. Then play around with the settings (the optimal settings will depend on your monitor and its color accuracy). Hope that you all find this useful.
Cheers,
CMR
I have never been a fan of reshade and other forms of postprocessing for contrast, brightness, vibrancy, etc... I find them to be overdone (usually oversaturated) and - more importantly - they create graphical issues in-game and guarantee an FPS drop. I decided to see about implementing an experimental (or beta) feature offered from nVidia GeForce Experience: nVidia Freestyle.
It is essentially a reshade type application, but natively supported by nVidia so everything runs smoothly. It also offers a simpler (albeit more limited) set of options to tweak; however, I have been using it on FIFA 19 on my PC, and I now have contrast levels that are cinematic, highlights and shadows which are accurate, and a color gradient that is linear.
The catch is that Freestyle is only available on supported games. But, if you use nvidia profile inspector you can override the limitation and enable it. Open GeForce Experience, go to settings, and then select to enable experimental features. Next, open nVidia profile inspector, select FIFA 19 from the menu of games, scroll down to the section entitled 'other', and then change the first option (Ansel flags for enabled applications) to 'ANSEL_WHITELISTED_ALLOWED'. When in the game, open the in-game overlay and select game filters. Then play around with the settings (the optimal settings will depend on your monitor and its color accuracy). Hope that you all find this useful.
Cheers,
CMR