FPS stands for Frames Per Second, and it tells us how many pictures a screen shows every second.
Imagine you're watching a cartoon on TV. The cartoon is made up of lots of tiny still pictures, called frames. If the TV shows more frames each second, the cartoon looks smoother, like when you flip through pages in a flipbook really fast. That’s what happens with FPS!
How it works
Think of a clock that ticks once every second. Each tick is one frame. If the clock ticks 30 times in one second, that means 30 frames per second. The more frames shown each second, the smoother and more lively the action looks.
Why it matters
If a game or movie has a low FPS, like only 15 frames per second, it might look a bit choppy, like when you flip through a flipbook slowly. But if it has a high FPS, say 60 frames per second, it will feel smooth and fast, just like the cartoon you watch on TV!
Examples
- A child watching a cartoon with 10 frames per second might notice the animation feels choppy.
- A video game running at 30 FPS feels smoother than one running at 15 FPS.
- When a movie is played on a screen with 24 FPS, it looks like regular film.
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See also
- How Does FPS Vs. Hz Explained Work?
- How Does 314 Set & Match® System Work?
- What are frame rates?
- What is a Video Decoder?
- What are videos made of?