I've been messing around with anaglyph 3D gaming for the last week or so. I've tried it both ways, and I have to say, no matter if you have the facing inward or a straight, you are gonna get 3D. Now saying this, there's a crux. To get the 3D effect both eyes must be able to see any given monitor. This doesn't work too well with the side monitors that have a good amount in your peripheral vision. So you lose some 3D in the peripheral, but you are gonna lost it no matter what unless you move away from the monitors.
Are you doing 3 monitor 3D or just moving one screen around to get the
different angles?
I'm doing 3 Monitor.
Interesting. I suppose the same holds true for shutterglass? Would you say losing peripheral 3D is more immersive than moving back?
This will hold true for shuttershades.
Personally, I only felt immersed up close, because really the non 3D in peripheral doesn't matter a whole lot. It's like edge distortion, you're focused on the middle monitor, so that's where it counts.
ALSO TO NOTE: When 3D is turned on, I noticed frame rate drops (I got as low as 2fps in UT3 engine games). I have been running modern games at 3840x720 instead of my normal 4080x768 because the screen gets rendered twice. You're going to want a decent card or scale back settings because it effectively double the work load of the card.
I've been playing pretty much anything in 3D and I must say so far, my favorite games to play are UT3 and Gears of War.
At first I was skeptical about 3D and games. You can pass it up as a gimmick, if you haven't tried it on a good game. But once you get a good grasp on how to get the effect, you wont want to play without it. It's seriously amazingly immersive. Getting shot never looked so good haha. The only thing that bothers me are Red, Extremely Blue, and Bright Objects on Screen. But seriously the anaglyph driver is free, and works on standard monitors, give it a try.