Warbler said:
could have sworn it was 60fps, but I am of course no expert.
Given the only source for consumer "60 fps" is video games, there's really no comparing a video game to film. Video games don't have motion blur and the unreliability of realtime rendering means you get lots of microstutters slowdowns and other faults that cause it to be significantly less stable than an equivalent video or film framerate. "30" in a video game is probably more like 15 in a regular video.
Though some TV shows were recorded at 60 or 50 fields per second I guess.