AOC AGON AG274QZM - 27 Inch QHD Mini LED Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, 1ms GTG, IPS, HDR1000, KVM, Height Adjustable, USB HUB (2560 x 1440 @ 240hz, HDR1000, HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, USB-C 65w power delivery)

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AOC AGON AG274QZM - 27 Inch QHD Mini LED Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, 1ms GTG, IPS, HDR1000, KVM, Height Adjustable, USB HUB (2560 x 1440 @ 240hz, HDR1000, HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, USB-C 65w power delivery)

AOC AGON AG274QZM - 27 Inch QHD Mini LED Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, 1ms GTG, IPS, HDR1000, KVM, Height Adjustable, USB HUB (2560 x 1440 @ 240hz, HDR1000, HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, USB-C 65w power delivery)

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
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Description

You’ll notice the benefits when viewing any HDR content, whether it’s games, HDR movies, or even HDR clips on YouTube. A sunset will appear bright, crisp, and detailed, while a flashlight in a foggy midnight forest will appear as a spot of brilliance in an otherwise foreboding scene. In typical internet fashion you replied rudely to a comment you skipped through because you felt a single line was incorrect without reading the whole thing. At the base of the stand, there’s even a little RGB LED projector that beams the AOC and AGON logos onto your desk, but it’s not customisable so it’s redundant unless you’re really into the brand. Ports: 1x DisplayPort 1.4, 2x HDMI 2.1, 1x USB Type-C (DP alt mode, upstream) with 65 watts of power delivery, 4x USB Type-A at USB 3.2, microphone in, 3.5mm headphone out The AG274QGM will apparently be released in July, in China at least. The availability and the RRP of AGON PRO AG274QGM are not yet confirmed for other regions we are told by AOC. More info when we get it.

AOC AGON PRO AG274QZM Review: Hot and heavy - Reviewed

The AG274QXM has a native 170Hz refresh rate, which is fairly modest in the 1440p monitor space nowadays (with a fair few 240Hz+ options available), but still decent for gaming. There is an advertised 1ms G2G response time spec, and a range of overdrive settings available in the menu to help you obtain the optimal gaming performance and pixel response times. evernessinceNo, that's an assumption you made. If you read my priors, I specifically state on multiple occasion that the benefit under typical lighting condition of OLED wanes. I also made an argument that current OLED monitors (I'm putting more qualifiers here because you seem drawn to misinterpreting things) are too dim to be used in all environments, which is 100% true. Coverage is how much of the gamut is covered, whilst volume includes any colour that extends beyond the defined gamut. G-Sync is officially supported, and this display is also FreeSync compatible. The activation window stretches from 48-240 Hz over both DP and HDMI. If you have a gaming console 1440p@120 Hz is available on the Xbox Series consoles, and Sony now supports native 1440p@120 Hz on the PS5, too.

Vesa Certified DisplayHDR™ 1000

You are arguing against it without using it. It is not nearly as dark as you think. I have to turn the brightness down on my OLED.My monitor is calibrated to 210 nits via a ColorMunki Display (a professional colorimeter) for a mostly dim room and I've routinely calibrated displays for people with various needs and ambient light levels. Do not assume that someone doesn't know what a specific brightness level is like. For everyone else, it’s probably overkill; I couldn’t really tell the difference between games running at 240Hz and games running at “only” 170Hz on my regular 1440p gaming monitor. That’s about the standard for mid-tier monitors these days, and it’s even possible to buy a truly excellent 27-inch, 1440p gaming monitor that can still hit 240Hz like the Alienware AW2723DF for literally half the price. Visually with HDR mode enabled the screen looked quite washed out and a bit too cool in Windows, and as if the luminance balance was not quite correct. This applied in all 4 modes. We have provided some further measurements below of this default setup to provide more information.

AOC Monitors AG274QXM | AOC Monitors

The spec list will have gamers salivating: it’s Mini LED, runs at 240Hz and has a 1ms response time. It’s littered with RGB LEDs and even has a KVM switch for easy PC and console use.One of the most notable complaints with the alienware or LG OLED monitors is that text is blurry. This extends to the LG C2 as well. IMO this is a dealbreaker because being a PC monitor means having text on screen in most cases, often of smaller sizes, and impairing the ability to read that is going to diminish the experience greatly. Corsair Dominator Titanium First Edition DDR5-6600 C32 2x32GB Review: Abundant Capacity And Performance Mind you when it comes to motion clarity the BenQ Zowie XL2566K (which is TN) was the winner by far. Asus ROG Swift OLED PG27AQDM April 13, 2023 The new 27″ 1440p OLED monitor from Asus with 240Hz refresh rate, a custom heatsink and 1000 nits HDR brightness

AOC AGON Pro AG274QXM review - TFTCentral AOC AGON Pro AG274QXM review - TFTCentral

The screen can offer the colour enhancements associated with HDR content with 98% absolute / 115.9% relative DCI-3 coverage measured. Also for comparison there’s 83.7% of the Rec.2020 space covered which is very good, and that’s the colour space HDR content is mastered in. This is higher coverage than many other wide gamut screens on the market. There is also a 10-bit colour depth support refresh rate This fast-paced panel is ready for eSports thanks to superb motion performance and a 1ms response time. Color gamut is a major strength, as the AOC Agon Pro AG274QZM delivers 100 percent of sRGB, which is common, and 100 percent of AdobeRGB, which is extremely rare even among top-tier OLED and IPS monitors with Quantum Dots panels. The monitor handles 95 percent of DCI-P3. It has a 10-bit panel, as well, which means color banding is rarely visible due to the extreme number of colors available. You can access the sRGB emulation mode by changing the ‘colour temp’ setting in the menu. The results are good overall, but annoyingly this mode is not really usable! It works nicely to offer an emulation and clamping of the sRGB colour space as you can see from the CIE diagram (98.9% relative coverage now). Gamma is a bit low but remains pretty good (2.10 average). White point is very close to the target (1% deviance), but greyscale has gotten a little cool now in this mode (4% deviance). Contrast took a small hit down to 942:1 but the good news is that colour accuracy of sRGB colours is now very good, with a dE 1.4 average. Colour accuracy was less consistent around the display, but if it hadn’t been for the measurement report I likely wouldn’t have noticed, as colours remained vibrant across the display. If you’re doing colour critical editing work this may be of concern, but for gaming and movies, it’s perfectly acceptable.So for different use cases you will have different needs, and generally we adjust our environment to meet those needs. I don't need color pop and eye candy when I'm writing text in an office; lower brightness even helps me work longer. But I do want it later when I start gaming at home - and I can easily have the lighting conditions required to get there. evernessinceThink about that for a second. You take your phone outside and it automatically increases screen brightness so that elements on the screen are still visible. The same concept applies here, the more ambient light, the higher brightness that is required to keep the display visible. You're trying to adjust realities to make your point that OLED is too dim. Sorry bud, that's just not true. Asus Announced ROG Swift PG32UCDM with 31.5″ QD-OLED Panel, 4K and 240Hz Refresh Rate August 22, 2023 The panel response of the AG274QZM is excellent. In my testing, setting the overdrive to Weak garnered the best results, effectively eliminating motion blur. Responsiveness is very slightly improved with the Medium preset, but this introduces slight overshoot, whilst the Strong overdrive setting further increases overshoot and introduces some mild inverse ghosting, though not to the levels of some other panels we’ve tested. Of special note is the superb perceived off-angle viewing performance. Brightness, contrast and vibrancy was retained almost perfectly to my eye, even at the most extreme of angles. IPS displays usually excel at this anyway, but the AG274QZM performed better than most.

AOC Monitors AG274QG | AOC Monitors

The Nvidia Reflex Latency Analyzer has several options for monitoring sensitivity (how often the timing is sampled) plus the size and position of the measuring rectangle. The numbers appear in small font in the upper right corner of the screen. You can monitor your input lag in real-time while playing. Most monitors are not calibrated out of the box and if they are, they are calibrated at the out of the box brightness (typically 250 - 350 nits). Adjusting brightness higher or lower will impact the deltaE. If you care about color accuracy you should be calibrating your display with a measurement instrument regardless after you adjust your display to your desired brightness. Competitive gamers have long used the “Digital Vibrance” mode in the NVIDIA Control Panel to help make enemies pop and add more colour to scenes. The new class of 1440p G-SYNC esports displays have an enhanced vibrance mode – specifically tuned for esports – built directly into the monitor firmware. Dual-Format 25”There were some much larger improvements in “whole screen contrast” in HDR, measuring a 10% sized central bright area relative to a dark area at the edge of the screen. This was measured at ~37,500:1 which was much better and so overall across the screen as a whole you can achieve some significant improvements in contrast in certain scenarios. Absolute nonsense, all you have to prevent is getting sunlight to fall onto your screen or having it behind you, which is the case with every other monitor ever - that's just unpleasant to look at. Color Setup has a 6-axis color adjustment plus three color temp presets. The user mode has precise RGB sliders that help achieve pro-level grayscale accuracy for both SDR and HDR. The Audio menu includes a toggle for DTS sound processing. Turning this on improves the audio by expanding the soundstage. It also sounds a little less tinny though you won’t hear any serious bass from the internal speakers.



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