Screen Tearing Test

Check whether fast horizontal motion produces visible tears or broken lines on your display when frame rate and refresh rate are out of sync.

Hardware Refresh Rate: Calculating...

Read the detailed guide and interpretation tips

How to recognize tearing

Tearing appears as one or more horizontal breaks where parts of different frames are shown at the same time. It is often easiest to spot on fast moving vertical lines or scrolling motion.

Use this test while comparing V-Sync, G-Sync, FreeSync or frame-rate limit settings. A clean result usually means frame delivery is matching the display refresh more closely.

How to read the result

Use the focused test first, then confirm what you see on at least one or two additional steps. A single quick glance can be misleading on glossy panels, OLED screens or displays with strong reflections.

Related tests you should also try

Screen Tearing (V-Sync)

Watch for horizontal tears when a fast line moves across the screen.

UFO Ghosting & Overdrive

Track fast moving objects and look for trailing blur or inverse ghosting halos.

Response Time / Input Lag Demo

See how quickly the display reacts to a click or key press.

Gamma Calibration

Verify that your display stays close to a 2.2 gamma target.

Frequently asked questions

Screen tearing happens when the graphics output and monitor refresh are not synchronized, so parts of different frames appear on the screen at the same time.

V-Sync often reduces tearing, but it can also add latency or stutter in some situations. Adaptive sync options such as FreeSync or G-Sync may provide a better balance.

Higher refresh rates can reduce how obvious tearing looks, but they do not eliminate it if frame delivery still falls out of sync.

Yes. A browser-based tearing test is useful for a quick visual check before you fine-tune game settings and graphics driver options.

Starting Test

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