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geekhack Community => Other Geeky Stuff => Topic started by: BazzerB_89 on Wed, 08 July 2020, 07:13:30
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I'm looking at making the jump to an ultrawide monitor soon, as my current PG279Q has, for me at least, run its course. One monitor that has peaked my interest lately is the Xiaomi Mi Surface 34". However, I do have some questions about it if I may.
What has your experience been like in terms of shipping and daily use?
Does anyone in the UK have one? If so, what has your experience been like?
As I have an RTX 2080 Super, will it work with G-Sync/Adaptive Sync ok (whether officially or not)?
If I have any other questions, I'll edit this OP.
Cheers for any feedback in advance
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Ultrawides can be wonderful. The only concern with gaming is that some games STILL (for some reason) suck at supporting it, but even in the worst case scenario, you just play at 16:9 with black bars on the sides so it's not so bad.
As for that specific ultrawide, it doesn't look bad. It's a FreeSync compatible display, I'm not sure if it will work with nVidia cards or not. A quick Google Search doesn't bring up any instances of people saying it's possible, but it also doesn't bring up any results of people asking. You might try posting in reddit's r/monitors and see if someone who has one can test it for you.
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For ultrawides, 5040x2160 should be the minimum resolution if they're doing 21:9, to get pixel perfect 3840x2160
A 3840 width 21:9 monitor is imho too limiting.
The MSI Prestige PS341WU has that, but It's an IPS, so movies will look crummy. No perfect ultra wide monitor out there.
For 16:9, the nearly ideal PC display would be the new LG CX Oleds. Buh, I'm still suspicious of their burn-in claims. And you'd have to set it quite low ~130 nits to be under the ABL limiter.
LMCL is due this year, so that's gonna be the game changer for PC.
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For ultrawides, 5040x2160 should be the minimum resolution if they're doing 21:9, to get pixel perfect 3840x2160
A 3840 width 21:9 monitor is imho too limiting.
The MSI Prestige PS341WU has that, but It's an IPS, so movies will look crummy. No perfect ultra wide monitor out there.
For 16:9, the nearly ideal PC display would be the new LG CX Oleds. Buh, I'm still suspicious of their burn-in claims. And you'd have to set it quite low ~130 nits to be under the ABL limiter.
LMCL is due this year, so that's gonna be the game changer for PC.
I looked into LG CX models, looking good, you think burn-in issue might be high?
What is that LMCL?
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PC/Games UI have too many static elements and that causes extremely uneven wear for OLED, which leads to the burn-in.
LMCL blows OLED out of the water in terms of HDR performance, and it has comparable black lvls. And it won't burn in. Light Modulating Cell Layer. It's dual LCD layer.
OLED still has wider viewing angles.
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I looked into LG CX models, looking good, you think burn-in issue might be high?
well OLEDs have a fairly short lifespan compared to normal LEDs, the OLEDs that are on more than the others will wear (burn) faster, and emit less and less light, it is the normal life cycle of LEDs and that is what leads to burn in on OLEDs like old plasma and CRT (anything where the light emitting part is actually creating the image will have burn in pretty much)
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Ultrawides can be wonderful. The only concern with gaming is that some games STILL (for some reason) suck at supporting it, but even in the worst case scenario, you just play at 16:9 with black bars on the sides so it's not so bad.
As for that specific ultrawide, it doesn't look bad. It's a FreeSync compatible display, I'm not sure if it will work with nVidia cards or not. A quick Google Search doesn't bring up any instances of people saying it's possible, but it also doesn't bring up any results of people asking. You might try posting in reddit's r/monitors and see if someone who has one can test it for you.
I did do a bit of digging since, and I've found out that the CU34G2X from AOC uses the same panel as the one from Xiaomi (which is from Samsung). According to a review from Hardware Canucks, the AOC monitor is G-Sync Compatable via DisplayPort 1.4.
The main difference is that the Xiaomi doesn't have the "gaming aesthetic."
Edit: This panel seems to be used in a couple of monitors (the Nixeus EDG34 being one of them).
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I loved my ultrawide. I moved on to a 2560x1440 144hz, still miss 3440x1440. Someday, I'll pick up that AOC ultrawide
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For speed purposes, fewer pixels, and smaller will always be better, because crossing larger area makes strobe synchronization worse, so the size impacts motion clarity.
Probably the Ultimate PRO gaming monitors <non-OLED> will be capped around 27" for a long time.
Oled still does not have the motion clarity of Strobed LCDs yet even though they can be sort of fast and big..