No, that doesn't make sense, because it's not confined to V-position. You can force blank at any point, and turn it off at any point. I've tested turning it on and off for part of a scanline. It's got nothing to do with VBlank, and the emulator author shouldn't have called it that (unless this is somehow a totally different thing being called this for some reason).iNCEPTIONAL wrote: ↑Fri Jul 15, 2022 2:34 pmIt totally made sense to me: Forcing blanking at some point vertically down the screen, ala, Forced VBlank.
Forced VBlank might be a decent term for a programming practice, namely the one that uses forced blank to extend VBlank, although it isn't common. But it's not a good name for the hardware feature itself.