The missing dot is not just a thing that helps stabilize the colors in a picture, it's literally a missing dot. The first scanline is literally twitching left and right by one pixel every other frame. You probably can't see it on your TV without messing with the vertical hold.
nubinetwork 18 hours ago [-]
I thought the first scanline was wacky because it's sending one extra pixel than the other ~239 lines...
Side rant, isn't that actually scanline 22? Scanline 21 is off-screen, its where closed captions used to come from...
mrandish 17 hours ago [-]
It turns out which scanline counts as "first" depends on whether we're talking about SMPTE 170M (analog composite video) or Rec. 601 (digital composite video). Per the specifications, in 170M there are half lines but in Rec 601 there aren't.
nicole_express 17 hours ago [-]
Nothing is actually rendered on the pre-render scanline, though?
ndiddy 16 hours ago [-]
As far as I understand it, the missing cycle at the end of the pre-render scanline means that the first scanline will start a cycle early every other frame. When this happens, that scanline will be drawn one pixel to the left of where it should be. In practice, this typically causes the first few scanlines to get skewed slightly (you can see this at the top right corner of your Mighty Bomb Jack screenshot) but I don't know enough about NTSC decoding to explain why this happens. This is more noticeable if you can get footage of the system displaying tiles on the top of the background, rather than the plain blue background at the top like your Mighty Bomb Jack screenshot has.
BearOso 3 hours ago [-]
That's probably in an overscan area on most TVs, so it might not even show up.
brianpan 18 hours ago [-]
Growing up I definitely noticed the wobble.
But I'm also so used to it that I didn't realize a lot of examples were videos.
Really interesting investigation!
infinitewindow 5 hours ago [-]
The VS system that Nintendo built for arcades with high-quality CRTs has a graphics processor that does output RGB, unlike the NES/Famicom PPU.
Side rant, isn't that actually scanline 22? Scanline 21 is off-screen, its where closed captions used to come from...
But I'm also so used to it that I didn't realize a lot of examples were videos.
Really interesting investigation!