🎮 Level Up Your Game with M-Cable!
The Marseille Networks M-Cable Gaming Edition for Xbox One is a cutting-edge HDMI cable designed to deliver the most realistic gaming experience. With its built-in computer, it enhances image details, depth, and color while eliminating jagged edges and shimmering effects through patented algorithms. Experience ultra-high frame rates and VR gaming at 1080p up to 120 FPS, all with lag-free processing in under 1 millisecond. Compatible with various HDMI-enabled consoles, this cable is a must-have for serious gamers.
A**A
Qualidade extremamente importante, desempenho extremamente fidedigno.
Uso esse cabo da Marseille só para jogos,e notei uma mudança bastante significativa, imagem de 1080p totalmente limpa com os pixels todos organizados contraste aumentado.
A**X
Stunningly surprised
First time buying a luxury item for the switch but after watching reviews wow this cable did not disappoint only for the gamers who are willing to pay a high price be warned it is Luxury for the price makes a difference but not a massive one still worth it if you have a switch I would say since it is not yet in 4K
A**T
En la Switch
Sin duda mejora la Switch, sobre todo en juegos de mundo abierto Youka lele, Doom, Mario Odyssea, lo único que me llama la atención el calor que genera el cable después de 30 min de uso, pero sin duda es mejor que en videos que había visto por la red, solo un juego se puso lento con el cable El NBA 2k Playgro.., se ve a mi marcados menos de 25 fps, pero si se cambia a cámara fija se resuelve el problema, juntar dos cables el gaming y el Ultraedition mejora mucho la cálida de imagen, ojo no soporta HDR, NI 4K a 60Fps sólo a 30 fps.
R**X
Not Snake Oil! Great for X-Box 360 and PS3
The only case I found for keeping it was with my PS3, which did perform as advertised.The main reason I bought this cable was to use with my RGB modded N64 through an OSSC. Using the game shark code, I removed the first pass of antialiasing. Then I hoped upscaling from 480P --> 1080p with the cable and adding AA at the last step would result in a cleaner soft image. It did, but it also stretched the 4:3 content to 16:9 instead of integer scaling, which looks bad. I used HD Retrovision SNES component cables to the OSSC in Line Double mode. Also there was no sound. In Line 3x mode it had the correct aspect ratio, but still no audio, and the screen was peppered with graphical artifacts. It's clear the OSSC has issues with this cable or visa-versa. I would have liked to try it on an UltraHDMI modded N64 with Deblur enabled in addition to the disabled first AA pass. Sadly I'm still waiting on mine.I tried Dreamcast via D-sub 15 to the OSSC. No audio and screen was stretched to 16:9. It did look pretty amazing, if it were not for that aspect ratio. No setting I could find fixed it. The cable must do it on it's own.***EDIT***I discovered that the audio issue can be resolved by toggling the audio source in the OSSC menu. It seems to be caused each time the game switches from 480i and 240p, so certain games and consoles will run into issues with this combination (N64 for example). That's very annoying. I don't have this issue with a regular HDMI cable.The 16:9 stretching can be fixed by toggling the TV aspect ratio to normal, which squeezes the picture back to 4:3. However, be aware that not all TVs are flexible in this regard. My VIZIO P-series is on a power trip and stubbornly reminds me "it's already in the best mode", disabling other aspect modes (which is a stone wall slap in the face). A true upscaler like the Micomsoft XRGB mini framemeister has options to crop and scale the image displayed. So I could get around this issue by adding it to the chain. For example, N64--(Component)-->OSSC--(mCable)-->Framemeister--(HDMI)-->TV. Unfortunately, the cost of doing that is prohibitively high with the Framemeister costing over $300, the OSSC over $150, and the mCable around $100. Not to mention that the framemeister is soon to be discontinued, adds about a frame of lag, and is another thing taking up space in my AV setup (not to mention the rats nest of wires).***EDIT***There is no point in keeping the cable Just for movies, as there is a cinema version that is less expensive. I am not willing to keep it just for PS3/X-Box 360, which IMO look fine on a 4K TV without this cable. I was under the impression that it would upscale 1080p content to 4k, but it didn't work for me...***EDIT***Actually, it does. However, it only does so for 1080p 24Hz content, like movies. I watched a BluRay on my PS3 upscaled to 4K and it does look better than without the mCable. 1080p games don't upscale to 4K because they run at 60 FPS (Hz) and the mCable can't do that. For them it adds nothing to the image. It does upscale 480p/720p --> 1080p, with good, lag free, Anitaliasing. You'll need to change the settings in your PS3/X-BOX 360 to output in 720p instead of 1080p. In the PS3 at least you can change the BluRay video output separate from Games, so both 1080p for games and 4k for BluRay will be handled by the cable. The stretch to 16:9 aspect ratio may be an issue if your TV doesn't allow you to squeeze it back to 4:3, if you plan on using this cable to play SD era games.***EDIT***Bottom line: If you want to smooth out jagged lines on 720p era games (PS3/X-Box 360) then this will work great. If you only want to upscale BluRay to 4K for a modest bump up in picture quality, buy the cinima cable. If you own a PS3, get the Gaming edition. If you thought of pairing it with an OSSC to handle retro games, they don't play nice! You may need a frameister to solve aspect ratio issues, it your TV rudely refuses to.
E**R
Definite Improvement To PSVR
Only tried Firewall so far, but the picture looks around 20% sharper & clearer. As for 4K VR videos, they are around 30-40% sharper & clearer.
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