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Deleted member 59090
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34" UW, I'm guessing.
35" actually but at the same 3440x1440 resolution.
34" UW, I'm guessing.
The 'R' just denotes retail packagingWhat is the R in the end?
I still found just 1 reddit post about that screen but nothing else.
Say 1 so we can check.
I cant find any D2716DGR, do you mean D2716DG?
Oh ok.
Sure TN:s have improved but they are still soooo far away from IPS, I would never personally get TN again.
IPS:
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TN:
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Hey GAF so I bought the Asus PG279Q for $780, it got delivered today. I also just went out and purchased 3 Acer XB271HU from Costco for $500 each. I'm testing each one right now for backlight bleed and dead pixel.
I only need 1, what should I do? keep one of the Acer monitor? or keep the Asus one? Help me. what do you think it's better?
Is there a link to Acer having a newer revision of the panel?The Acer is generally regarded as being slightly better, given that it's a newer revision of the panel that's in the Asus.
I'd say get the XB271HU because by the time 4K HDR monitor become affordable in a couple of years. It would be benefit from you running a 1070 or whatever you'll have at the time.Hey guys, I'm deciding between getting a XB271HU or a Predator X34.
While the ultra wide X34 provides an awesome immersive experience, I am tending more towards the XB271HU for a couple reasons:
- Native 144 Hz vs the overclocked 100Hz of the X34
- I have a 1070 and the lower resolution of the XB271HU should allow me to play games at higher settings for a couple years (I dont plan on upgrading my gpu anytime soon)
What do you guys think?
Is there a link to Acer having a newer revision of the panel?
Is there a link to Acer having a newer revision of the panel?
I'd say get the XB271HU because by the time 4K HDR monitor become affordable in a couple of years. It would be benefit from you running a 1070 or whatever you'll have at the time.
1440p is the sweet spot right now between price and performance.
Hey guys, I'm deciding between getting a XB271HU or a Predator X34.
While the ultra wide X34 provides an awesome immersive experience, I am tending more towards the XB271HU for a couple reasons:
- Native 144 Hz vs the overclocked 100Hz of the X34
- I have a 1070 and the lower resolution of the XB271HU should allow me to play games at higher settings for a couple years (I dont plan on upgrading my gpu anytime soon)
What do you guys think?
Don't know if you guys can help me but I've been trying to find a 1080p 144hz IPS monitor that supports G-Sync. Is there like a list of G-Sync supported monitors or if anyone has any recommendations?
I love G-sync but cant enjoy the smaller screen and poor image after using my OLED screen for over a year.
Adaptive framerate can not come fast enough for TV's.
I'm pretty sure gsync doesn't work with a PS4 proI managed to get myself to a Microcenter this past weekend and got a chance to see a bunch of G-Sync monitors first hand and suffice it to say, they were glorious. I've been mentally planning a new of build and have a G Sync monitor in mind for it. I do my lions share of game on PS4 these days and recently got a PS4 Pro. Anyone get any serious mileage out of a PS4 Pro and a G Sync monitor outside of 1080p. I only came across one that supported 4K at the store and I can't imagine the wide ones would probably work with a Pro outside of 1080p( which I assume would look weird on a wide monitor?).
So are 1080p gsync IPS panels not really available? I've seen a few TN ones at 1080p, but no IPS.
Right now I'm used to 1080p screen at 27inches. I'd have to get used to a further condensed image across the same 27inches:
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I would need at least 32inch for 1440p gysnc, but those prices.
Haha, i think 28inch for 1440p is just fine. But we have 28inch 4k monitors at work and everybody runs them with 150-200% zoom in windows, so that you can read stuff![]()
I managed to get myself to a Microcenter this past weekend and got a chance to see a bunch of G-Sync monitors first hand and suffice it to say, they were glorious. I've been mentally planning a new of build and have a G Sync monitor in mind for it. I do my lions share of game on PS4 these days and recently got a PS4 Pro. Anyone get any serious mileage out of a PS4 Pro and a G Sync monitor outside of 1080p. I only came across one that supported 4K at the store and I can't imagine the wide ones would probably work with a Pro outside of 1080p( which I assume would look weird on a wide monitor?).
Does 1080p look awful on a 1440 display? Honestly that's whats holding me back, as I said I do use my consoles at my desk.
Virtually no displays simply double the pixels when scaling 1080p to 4K - so you get blurry filtered scaling regardless.Not terrible but it's definitely not gonna be as good as 1080p content on 1080p or 4k.
I'm aware, I'm just curious of people's experiencing using these monitors with their PS4 Pro in particular. The G Sync is for my PC. I'll be playing my PS4 Pro on my inevitable G Sync monitor so I'm looking into people's experiences with them.Gsync monitors are for Nvidia GPU PCs only.
The same as any other monitor in whatever resolution you're looking for.I'm aware, I'm just curious of people's experiencing using these monitors with their PS4 Pro in particular. The G Sync is for my PC. I'll be playing my PS4 Pro on my inevitable G Sync monitor so I'm looking into people's experiences with them.
I'm aware, I'm just curious of people's experiencing using these monitors with their PS4 Pro in particular. The G Sync is for my PC. I'll be playing my PS4 Pro on my inevitable G Sync monitor so I'm looking into people's experiences with them.
Does 1080p look awful on a 1440 display? Honestly that's whats holding me back, as I said I do use my consoles at my desk.
Skyrim SE doesn't seem to use G-Sync at all, I just get screen tearing at 60 FPS.
I'm sure that it's doing something to help, but they still feel pretty bad.
Yes, I have been doing that.Check for fixes on internet.
Some games stutter because of bad engines or other reasons. Gsync only solves framepacing issues.
I've been having problems even on the lowest settings.Dishonored 2 is very VRAM hungry and swaps a lot on ULTRA, for example. Some other games have hardcoded Vsync (see Skyrim below).
Thanks for that, but I did try all of those suggestions and still couldn't get it working. I'll have to give it another try later.For those of you having issues starting the game with GSync. I may have found a fix.
Go into the Skyrim Prefs ini file located next to Saves. Go down to iVsyncpresentinterval and change to 0. Sve. Re-enable GSync and bam, no more glitches.
also https://steamcommunity.com/app/524220/discussions/0/135512291865418518/
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The Evil Within, which runs on id Tech 5, looked absolutely terrible until I reset my PC and then disabled V-Sync - however I have to launch the game with V-Sync enabled first or else G-Sync never seems to activate.
Yes, but if I add +r_swapInterval 0 to the launch options in Steam it doesn't start in G-Sync mode, and even changing it doesn't cause it to kick in.I have no problem with Evil Within. You have to disable Vsync with swapinterval 0 command on launch. I assume you did that.
Virtually no displays simply double the pixels when scaling 1080p to 4K - so you get blurry filtered scaling regardless.
Some games stutter because of bad engines or other reasons. Gsync only solves framepacing issues.
Does it?
I was under the impression framepacing and CPU related issues (asset streaming/decompression) are something G-Sync doesn't fix.
It uses multiples when the framerate drops below the panel's minimum refresh rate.Quick question: Does Gsync utilize multiples in its variable refresh rates? E.g. if a game runs at ~45 FPS on a 100 Hz Gsync monitor, does the refresh rate match the FPS (= ~45 Hz) or could it also refresh at 2x the FPS (so ~90 Hz). Would it even make a perceivable difference?
Quick question: Does Gsync utilize multiples in its variable refresh rates? E.g. if a game runs at ~45 FPS on a 100 Hz Gsync monitor, does the refresh rate match the FPS (= ~45 Hz) or could it also refresh at 2x the FPS (so ~90 Hz). Would it even make a perceivable difference?
It uses multiples when the framerate drops below the panel's minimum refresh rate.
Ideally you would always match the refresh rate to exactly the frame rate instead of a multiple, but there should not really be much of a difference with G-Sync.
Yes. Most panels seem to support a minimum of 40 Hz. Anything below that and doubling, tripling or quadrupling is employed. In your specific example most displays will show 45 fps at 45 Hz.
This graph from PCPer illustrates the behaviour.
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