AA (Anti-aliasing) is built into all "Easy" settings (except for "Prelim"). It varies per quality per setting.
So if you need better AA, simply "up" the quality a step. If you are doing a test render with "Low", and are happy with everything except AA, choosing "Low+" will give you good AA... not great, because, well, it is called "low" after all.
Additionally, each render setting is an .xml, so you can open a setting in notepad, and find the AA in that setting you like, and change the AA as you wish... but I would suggest saving a copy of the setting file into the "Custom" settings folder before changing it.
Bonus Tip: Some users find themselves only ever needing one or two of their favorite presets, and they have made a folder with a copy of those settings called "Favorites" or similar. This way they avoid needing to click thru the settings tree when they first open Twilight in a new session.
Controlling AA (Anti-Aliasing)
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