I was worried about the 1080 instead of 1140, but I am enjoying this better than having 3 gaming monitors I had prior.
I was worried about the 1080 instead of 1140, but I am enjoying this better than having 3 gaming monitors I had prior.
My usual monitor set up is one 27in monitor, or two 24in monitors side-by-side, so this, as an equivalent to two 27in monitors My usual monitor set up is one 27in monitor, or two 24in monitors side-by-side, so this, as an equivalent to two 27in monitors seamlessly joined, is an impressive step up.
Ordered online via Click and collect, and the monitor arrived at my local store in less than 24 hrs, it was very easy to assemble and connect with the included HDMI cable in HDMI2 port (important to use high refresh rate).
Notable features: Built in speakers that are surprisingly loud and good for being built in The ultrawide resoutions it has will be good for some games Comes with an adjustable stand (though I haven't really messed with adjusting the height since I have an adjustable table) 1x2 windows split looks...
It was higher than my original budget which was £200-£250,however was worth the extra money. At launch I heard it was a lot cheaper about £220 or summit never the less still worth it and is 144hz. Colour are very accurate and at different angles colour don't look too washed out compare to ips panel.
The Samsung C27JG50/C32JG50 is missing one of the most essential (and free) gaming features. Given that there are equally priced FreeSync models based on the same panel, we recommend avoiding the CJG5 displays unless you happen to stumble upon a huge discount.
Affordable; High contrast ratio; High pixel density; Low input lag
No AMD FreeSync; Tilt-only design; Visible ghosting in fast-paced games; No backlight strobing ability
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