![]() So, what Windows does, is treat the program as an image, and just scale the program larger and add a smoothing effect on it so that text is readable, but it looks blurry. ![]() There is nothing Microsoft can do about it. Might as well go a China in a tiny village, and say in French: "Make it bigger!", and leave, and wonder why everyone looks at you crazy. If it uses something else, or custom, then Windows can't inject anything. The issue with this method, is that it can only do it IF the program uses Windows GUI frameworks. That you can do by right-clicking on the program shortcut or executable, and select Properties, go under Compatibility tab, and check the box "Disable display scaling on high DPI settings", and click OK (and start/restart the program). Inject code in the program to force text to appear bigger (but the rest remains small). When Windows detects that a program is not high-DPI aware, it can only do 2 things. The problem is that most developers are still stuck in their cave, because the majority of PCs don't have anything above a 23/24inch 1080p screen, so instead of pushing things like they used to back in the old days, they now look at marketshare, and use that as a deciding factor. But the reccommended settings is 125% tho?For the best viewing experience 125% is indeed the best for your monitor. ![]()
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