So this is all documented in the BMS Technical Manual if you want to look it up long hand.
The nofx parameter is an on/off switch so adding it to the command line (by including “–nofx”) invocation for the client will apply it. In the ini file, a value of zero disables nofx and a value of 1 in the file enables it.
The purpose of nofx is to deliver clean sound instead of radio-like sound. There are still range-roll-off and line-of-sight effects so volume levels can be attenuated or cut off (respectively) depending on the relative position of players trying to talk to each other over IVC if you are both in the 3D world. So…
If you want to remove all DSP effects to get at clear audio then you want nofx enabled. So either add it to the command line or change the value from zero to one in the ini file for that line (which based on the file image pasted above means: remove the “#” from the start of the nofx line and then change the “0” to a “1” and see if that works for what you want).
Sorry but that’s not what the manual says, if if that is what it means
"Sound effects: /N or –-nofx
If present this switch will cause all sound effects processing to do with signal strength and interference to be omitted. This results in clearer sound reception although volume attenuation at extreme ranges is still present. In testing, it was noted that in some cases of mixed language speakers, heavy accents are already enough challenge to communications without the additional difficulties in hearing due to audio degradation. This switch can help if you need to set up a connection that is relatively clear in the 3D world but still sounds like radio transmission.
Example: “<yourinstallpath>:\FalconBMS\Bin\x86\ivc\IVC Client.exe” /N"
There’s no indication of a 0 or 1 flag, just the explicit existence of - - nofx
Sent from my Phone 2 using Tapatalk</yourinstallpath>
Alright noted, I use the .ini only, dont really know how command lines work, I’ll first try with “nofx = 1” if it doesnt make any difference I’ll try with “nofx” only