Read more.But it is sticking with OLED for its top of the range TV sets.
Read more.But it is sticking with OLED for its top of the range TV sets.
LG, please 4k 120Hz ~43" curved with low input lag for gaming!
pretty please!
strange as it sounds....I still miss 3D with passive glasses.
on the market offerings it actually is non existent
But I would buy one if there was.
Currently i use 40" 4k@60 going 4k@120 is possible in 48" only (as far as I know). For me it is not worth of an upgrade without curvature, as 40" shows needs for it already.
43" at 4k seems to be a sweet spot for pixel density and using screen with no scaling.
I think if the price was reasonable, lot of people would take that screen instead of ~37" UWQHD@144Hz with 1800CR.
For me the reason is simple, you get extra height for productivity, and you not sacrificing anything at all (apart from 24 additional Hz if your GPU manages).
This is IPS with quantum dots and mini-led dimming zones, it wont be as good as OLED but it might overcome the awful black levels of IPS assuming it works.
Keep in mind LG really need to improve their VRR support on their TV's with variable overdrive and gamma.
How long until the go to Micro LED?
Could be a nice new standard
This is good to hear because their current LCD TVs are a bit rubbish in terms of picture quality. Just like Panasonic who haven't produced a LCD TV with local dimming zones since 2016 - which is said to be a fantastic looking TV for what LCD is/was capable of. They said it's because it's not economically viable to make those FALD TVs so they just use low end panels for LCD now. So hopefully this will start a trend and fill that in the middle niche where someone can't afford OLED or doesn't want one due to various reasons, and doesn't want a lackluster LCD TV with no local dimming that can't do HDR the way it should be done. Sony somewhat fills that gap at the moment here with their FALD TVs in the 9000 series (like the xh90, xh95), but it would be nice to see some competition and better TVs since Sony's products tend to have their quirks and questionable choice of features mixed.
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