finalflame
Banned
It's not misinformation. I have a variety of TVs and a projection setup in my home which are also ISF and THX calibrated(as in I paid Lion AV to calibrate them). I'm very familiar with the downside of not inputting native res to a monitor.
I am saying this monitor does a fantastic job presenting the viewer with a 1080 image without introducing artifacts or softness that can occur in some 4K TV screens.
Games presented in 1080 and streaming video from Amazon in 1080. I will say that the black levels are not close to what I get on my Panasonic Plasma's but it's not possible to achieve that from this type of monitor.
I realize the ROG might do a good job of scaling images, but it still will be of lower quality than a 1080p image output on a native 1080p display due to scaling not being perfect. The image might look very good, but it's not as good as it would be without scaling.
Being an A/V enthusiast you must also understand that the ROG Swift uses a TN panel, which simply does not match the color reproduction of an IPS or PLS panel (much like it doesn't compare to the excellent black levels in your plasma display).
Either way, I realize the ROG Swift is a great panel. I was just trying to give the original poster some options or getting a 1080p G-Sync monitor now, and later upgrade to 1440p once IPS 144hz panels are more affordable and he gets a strong graphics card. A 980 translates to fantastic performance at 1080p, but lacking for 1440p. That's all.
A 980 is perfect for a g synch 1440p monitor.
Why, when it can't run most modern games at > 50fps at 1440p max settings? To what end is 144hz on a 1440p G-Sync monitor being used? People are free to buy whatever they want, but honestly, 144hz is lost on a single 980 at 1440p, unless you're looking to play older games. Which is fine.