Quote:
Originally Posted by Wolf_Rider
FoV doesn't zoom... binoculars do though, bringing an element of higher level flying difficulty (realistic) with them  as well as tracking (re-aquiring).
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While being as uncondescending as possible, I suggest you review your understanding of what FOV is, how it and binoculars work and what they have in common.
Let's just say that both 'zoom' by taking a small angle of our field of view and re-focussing it to take a larger portion of that field of view.
Small FOV's do this by rendering only a small part of the ingame view and having it cover the full viewing plane/monitor, which would normally display a much wider view.
Binoculars do this by taking light from a small part of our field of view and realigning and refocussing it to take a larger portion of our retina.
The principle however, in both cases, is the same. And perhaps once you understand why, you will grasp why FOV needs to match the field of view taken by your monitor in order to present a 1:1 view.
Then maybe you can end your insistence on 60 being the 'perfect' fov and opposition to the practice of switching between FOV's and realise that, like all viewing technologies, FOV is a compromise compared to our real world visual acuity. We don't do it to make the 'dots bigger' (it actually makes them smaller relative to everything else and much harder to spot) but in order to prevent things becoming dots in the first place and to see everything more clearly like it would appear in real life.