It may be another Nvidia-specific hardware driver issue again. I'd test it out myself but even with the default open-source non-proprietary drivers I'm using on my own Linux Mint OS laptop, I haven't encountered any screen-tearing issues in any programs or PCSX2. (Image credit: Nvidia) Screen tearing happens when your screen isn't in sync with your GPU, causing it to. Your issue is graphical tearing and typically that's a vsync/composition-specific issue rather than a PCSX2-specific issue. You may experience screen tearing if a game's fps doesn't match a monitor's refresh rate. They need to narrow down the issue in order to diagnose it and possibly either fix it in PCSX2 specifically or fix it upstream if needed. I'd recommend doing further testing like has stated with regards to enabling/disabling certain options and seeing what happens and providing test dumps where appropriate. Thinking its just a problem with those particular ISOs. In LOTR if you press pause the words dont show up, and this goes for all menus which makes the game unplayable. If you want this issue fixed then you'll need to be quite detailed in your future bug reports and provide detailed explicit information requested by the PCSX2 team and possibly the nouveau and upstream teams if applicable. Both games play fine and maintain 60 fps but Socom has constant tearing and some cutscenes do not appear. That said, on the Linux side we have a great deal more freedom in determining what is wrong and how to fix it since we have source-code access. There was an Nvidia-specific hack put in just to fix that and that took too much time & effort from the PCSX2 devs because Nvidia was shit about it. Both pcsx2 Vsync and NVCP vsync can fix that tearing without causing any new stutter, I see no difference between either method. On the Windows side we have had to do PCSX2-specific hacks to fix driver errors from idiots at Nvidia (and it is always Nvidia doing that crap) for that weird glitch with the emulation glitching out with zoom in/out repeatedly. I'm also aware of the realities and problems of the situation. Someone that tests out and reports Linux-based issues and contributes to a few Linux-based projects here and there, I'm well aware of the 'nouveau users'.
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