![[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged)](https://cdn.modrinth.com/data/CBsIxo5J/72d08c964fd22c5afe3dc93298bceb4b1233fc93_96.webp)
[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged)
Forge port of Quick & Dirty Anti-Aliasing which uses super-sampling to achieve less jagged edges on blocks.
Screenshots
![[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) Screenshot 1](https://cdn.modrinth.com/data/CBsIxo5J/images/4a336efc8224e40a34bd31c8c9d5da34650aa8f1.png)
About this Mod
Due to a lack of time, I am no longer updating this mod
This mod is currently cancelled as I have a lot of work these days.
QDAA is a mod for Fabric/Quilt (and later on NeoForge in 1.21+) that adds super-sampling to Minecraft. This mod is a port of that mod to Forge 1.20.1
Differences from Original: This forge port includes a settings to configure the scaling factor for the oversampled image. You have options between 1.0x (off), 1.25x, 1.5x, 1.75x, and 2.0x. By default, the mod uses 1.5x as 2.0x is overkill for most cases.
Side-effects (also present in fabric version): Due to the way this mod works, GUI scaling may be different with different scaling factors and thus will need to be readjusted in the settings.
Original Mod Description
Huh?
Antialiasing is often implemented via "FXAA", "TAA", "MSAA", etc. All of these methods are approximations, but they're very fast. FXAA and TAA are basically just really fancy blurs, and MSAA can only smooth polygon edges; pixelated textures are totally missed out on, which is most of what Minecraft is.
Super-sampling is the most pure, accurate, and expensive form of antialiasing. The entire scene is rendered at a higher resolution, and then downscaled for presentation. It's also the easiest to implement.
For example, if you're playing in a 1280×720 window, then QDAA (at 2.0x) will render the game at 2560×1440 instead, and then resize it to 1280×720 before it's drawn to the screen.
This mod reuses functionality in Minecraft that handles macOS Retina displays, so it should be quite compatible, except with other mods that modify how the framebuffer is drawn to the screen. It also technically optimizes the final render step, replacing a normal quad render with a blit.
Notably, due to how this works, QDAA can even antialias GUIs, improving readability of rotated text and smoothing the edges of 3D item models. Shaders only work on the world.
Available Versions
How to Install [Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) on Your Server
Order Server
Order a Minecraft Java server with at least 3 GB RAM (4 GB recommended).
Set forge Loader
In the panel under "Egg", select the forge loader and matching Minecraft version (1.20.1).
Install Mod
Open the mod browser in the dashboard and search for "[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged)". Click "Install" – done! Alternatively, upload the .jar via SFTP to the /mods folder.
Compatibility
Mod Loaders
Minecraft Versions
1.20.1
Server-side
✗ UnsupportedRecommended RAM
4 GB(min. 3 GB)Frequently Asked Questions
[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) server crashes on startup – what to do?
Most common cause: wrong forge version or insufficient RAM. Check the server log (latest.log) for "OutOfMemoryError" or "Mixin" errors. With Mado Hosting: ensure at least 3 GB RAM is allocated and the loader matches the mod version (1.20.1). You can switch loaders with one click in the panel.
Is [Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) compatible with forge?
[Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) officially supports forge for Minecraft 1.20.1. The Mado dashboard automatically detects incompatible loader combinations.
Server lagging with [Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) – how to optimize performance?
Recommended RAM: 4 GB (per 8 players). Use /spark profiler to check if [Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) consumes the most tick time. Common fixes: reduce server view-distance to 8-10, install "performant" or "starlight" as supplementary mods on Forge. With Mado Hosting, your server runs on NVMe SSDs with dedicated CPU cores for minimal latency.
Similar Mods
Rent Modded Server
Install [Cancelled] QDAA (Reforged) with just one click on your server.
