This article originally appeared in a slightly different form at http://aarongiles.com. You should read this if you are used to how MAME's video system worked prior to 0.107 and you want to understand how you should configure MAME with the new rendering system in place. The New Video Landscape Since its inception 9 years ago, MAME's video system has defaulted to a mode where it tries to change resolutions on you. And since the first port of the core to Windows 5 years ago, it has defaulted to using your graphics card to stretch the video to that resolution. I'm sure a lot of you out there have taken a lot of time to tweak the current set of video options to make them work the way you like. But every once in a while, you need to take a step back and re-evaluate the situation. The current video system has been in place for 5 years now without much substantial change. And with the recent rewrite, you're almost certainly going to want to rethink the way you have things configured. At the highest level, there are really three different ways you can configure the new system. Placing yourself into one of these three categories will help you get the initial settings right. From there, you can tweak with the settings to figure out what works best. Category 1: Bells and whistles. People who fall into this category would include anyone with a modern system and a decent video card (decent in this context means at least 16MB of VRAM and built in the last 5 years or so -- we're not talking cutting edge here). Any decent video card will be able to render the simple MAME graphics at pretty much any resolution without breaking a sweat. Configure your desktop to the video mode you want (preferably something high like 1024x768 or greater with a high refresh rate, unless you are running on a fixed-mode LCD, in which case just match what your LCD panel is), and tell MAME to leave the resolution alone. In this day and age, there is little reason to switch resolutions at all, unless you fall into Category 3, below. In this mode, you will have full access to artwork options, and you'll get your artwork scaled to full resolution and with full alpha blending effects. Vector games will look crisp, you can use decent fonts, and you can see a whole lot more of the world when using the graphics/tilemap viewer. This mode uses Direct3D, so you should configure yourself like this: -video d3d -noswitchres [-triplebuffer] [-nofilter] The -noswitchres option tells MAME to just run at the current resolution. Although you can let MAME pick a resolution for you, it doesn't really make much sense in D3D mode, and in fact I may even remove that feature altogether. To avoid tearing artifacts, I recommend using the -triplebuffer option as well. Just make sure your monitor's refresh rate is higher than the game you are running. If you dislike the blurry look of the graphics, you can specify the -nofilter option to disable bilinear filtering, though that will produce blocky artifacts. Alternatively, you can use the -prescale option which is described at the end of this article. Category 2: Like the old days. I really didn't even want to support this mode at all, but certain vocal MAMEdevs would have skinned me alive otherwise. People who fall into this category include those who have weak systems that worked fine with previous versions of MAME, but who don't run well with Direct3D rendering. (Note that just because Space Invaders runs unthrottled at 2000fps with DirectDraw and 1000fps with Direct3D doesn't mean that Direct3D is going to be a serious issue when playing at a regular 60fps, so if you're unsure, give the Direct3D route a try for a while.) In this mode, MAME will draw the game screen and artwork at the game's resolution, just like it did in MAME 0.106 and earlier; however, some artwork options, such as -artcrop, won't work as you might expect, and some alpha blending artwork modes (specifically overlays) will operate with a performance penality. MAME will then use your video card to stretch the video to the proper aspect ratio. -video ddraw -hwstretch [-switchres] [-triplebuffer] The -switchres is optional here. If your video card is really ancient and struggles expanding the screen to fit your desktop resolution, you might want to turn it on. Again, to avoid tearing artifacts, I recommend using the -triplebuffer option as well, but make sure your monitor's refresh rate is higher than the game you are running (-switchres will do that for you if you use it). If your video card produces blurry pixels which you don't like, try the -prescale option described at the end of this article. Category 3: Anal video mode types. These are the guys who have generally built their own cabinets and set them up with a CRT display where they have several dozen carefully hand-tweaked video modes that approximate the original video modes the games ran at. They want MAME to pick that hand-tweaked mode and use it, drawing one pixel on the screen for each pixel in the original game. They don't give a whit about artwork or anything other than the raw pixels going to the right place. Fortunately, you can still configure MAME for this case as well: -video ddraw -nohwstretch -switchres [-triplebuffer] Obviously in this case, the -switchres is required. You also want to disable hardware stretching, otherwise you won't get that "perfect" 1:1 pixel mapping. Triple buffering may or may not help. So, I recommend starting with these initial options and then tweaking from there. One additional option you might want to try in combination with the above is the -prescale option. -prescale takes an integer parameter from 1 to 8, and specifies a magnification amount by which the screen pixels are expanded before they are drawn to the screen. Why is this useful? And how much of a performance impact does it have? Well, that depends on the mode you are running in. If you are running in Category 1 (-video d3d), then -prescale will use your video card to scale the game graphics up before rendering them to the screen. Depending on the video card, this is usually a small performance hit, but not too significant. The benefit is that each prescale factor reduces the blurriness of the pixels. -prescale 1 is the default, which does no scaling. -prescale 2 will double each pixel, -prescale 3 will triple each pixel, etc. For my money, -prescale 2 is sufficient, but people with super high resolution displays claim that larger -prescale factors work even better. If you are running in Category 2 (-video ddraw -hwstretch), then -prescale will cause MAME to compose the screen graphics at the specified scale factor. This is unfortunately done in software, but carries the benefit that artwork, fonts, and the graphics viewer can take advantage of the additional resolution to produce nicer results. The end effect is that you will get less blurry pixels, just like the Category 1 case, plus higher quality artwork, fonts, and more visible area in the graphics viewer. If you are running in Category 3 (-video ddraw -nohwstretch), then -prescale will cause MAME to pick a video mode that is the prescale factor times the raw screen resolution, and then MAME will, in software, compose the screen graphics at the specified scale factor. This has all the advantages of the Category 2 case, except that since there wasn't any pixel blurring to begin with, there is no additional crispness that comes about as a result. Finally, you may be wondering about effects (and yes, scanlines are an "effect"). Effects are no longer hard-coded into the system. Rather, you can provide a PNG file in the artwork directory that will be loaded and overlaid on top of screen bitmaps. See the description of -effect in windows.txt for more details.