![]() The side-effect of this is that if you lower resolution in Windows, it will probably have a border around the display. If the monitor has options for display settings, set it not to stretch to fill the screen. ![]() I've tried to use auto-adjust on the monitor but it is greyed out for me. Same distorted boot logo screen still happens along with the 4:3 bios itself stretched into a 16:9 ratio. So my Asus Strix 1060 gpu died and I bought an MSI 1060 Gaming X. I can't say if it's normal for the bios logo to look different, I have not often seen it happen, and when I did, changing the connection type fixed it or it was just ignored. And all of them on different motherboards and CPU combinations as well. Is it normal to have distorted boot logos after installing GPUs? It's been like this with my MSI 1070 Gaming X, Asus GTX 1060 Strix, and MSI R9 280. In the bios, boot logo options are 'Auto', 'fullscreen', and 'off'. I am using a Dell S2340L 23" 1080p IPS monitor if that matters at all. I'll give it a try, but since the PC has an SSD I don't think I can get the monitor's auto-adjust function to work in time before it gets to the desktop where it is perfectly normal. If you were using VGA before, a digital signal can seem more blocky on low resolution. Hit the auto-adjust button on your monitor when those screens are up, see if that helps.
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