Can price match at JB and use discounted gift cards
600 nits peak brightness SDR, 1200 nits peak brightness in HDR, 1ms response time, 98% DCI-P3, 90w PD type C port, Adaptive sync
Can price match at JB and use discounted gift cards
600 nits peak brightness SDR, 1200 nits peak brightness in HDR, 1ms response time, 98% DCI-P3, 90w PD type C port, Adaptive sync
when they coming out can u give a rough estimate
I'm describing things that have already happened.
im slow
@Al Mawsil: All good, didn't want to leave you hanging!
Was there a 27" 4K 144Hz deal? Link please so i can bookmark the model later
Pretty good, would consider it a great deal if it was glossy instead of matte. But at these prices, you might just want to go for the new QD OLQD 4k 240hz. Glossy, insane response times, better colour, etc…
Tempting though.
I bought this monitor when it launched and would not recommend it.
The current firmware (1.4.1) still has bugs, and I suspect Coolermaster are done pushing out updates. Eg. it often fails to wake when given a signal requiring a power cycle to resolve, HDR brightness was reduced in 1.3 and hasn't been fixed, colour/saturation settings are locked out in HDR, KVM is unreliable, etc.
My main gripe is that there just isn't enough dimming zones, the blooming is pretty bad to my eye.
The only thing it has going for it is that it's a very bright monitor. SDR goes up to 600-700 nits easy, which is eye searing and enough to overpower sunlight if I open the blinds behind me. HDR in some games is effective, particularly in moderately lit scenes with bright highlights. Darker scenes don't work as well due to blooming from highlights.
Not the worst deal, but given that $500 is the starting point for 4K 144Hz deals, hard to cop miniLED costing double, especially with QHD 240Hz OLED right on its tether.
Response times are meh.