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LG UltraGear 45GR95QE - 45 Inch Curved OLED Gaming Monitor WQHD (3440 x 1440), 240Hz Refresh Rate, 0.03ms Response Time, Anti-glare, AMD FreeSync Premium, NVIDIA G-SYNC Compatible, HDMI 2.1

£9.9£99Clearance
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Throwing the UltraGear OLED 45 on a mount isn’t a bad idea, as the included stand doesn’t have a ton of room for adjustment. Of course, there are other cheaper options worth considering as well, such as the Samsung Odyssey Neo G9, the LG OLED42C2, the ASUS PG27AQDM, the Acer X32FP and the Dell AW3423DWF– all of which offer excellent HDR image quality and smooth gaming performance.

45GR95QE with 45″ Curved OLED Panel and 240Hz LG UltraGear 45GR95QE with 45″ Curved OLED Panel and 240Hz

Dieser OLED-Gaming-Monitor weist die derzeit (Stand: Dez. 2022) schnellste Wiederholrate (240 Hz) und kürzeste Reaktionszeit (0,03 ms) auf.

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By default, the LG 45GR95QE has a high 8500K color temperature, which results in bluish whites, so we recommend changing this in the OSD menu by selecting ‘Color Temperature’, then ‘Manual’ and ‘C1.’ The ‘Warm’ preset also has a normal 6500K color temperature. At a distance of roughly 41 inches (~104cm), the 3440×1440 resolution on a 44.5″ viewable screen becomes ‘retina’, meaning that you won’t be able to distinguish the individual pixels anyway. However, these are just ideal values and we find that there are no problems with the screen curvature or the pixels being too noticeable at a normal viewing distance for a monitor of this size. Leaked Roadmap Suggests MSI are Developing 6 New QD-OLED Monitors – including 360Hz OLED! October 1, 2023

LG UltraGear 45GR95QE review: a giant OLED ultrawide - T3

Die Bilder wurden zum besseren Verständnis der Funktionen simuliert. Bei der Verwendung in der Praxis kann es zu Abweichungen kommen. The Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 has a lot of similarities with the LG UltraGear, including the focus on gaming and the ultrawide, curved form factor. One of the key differences is that it comes with on-board apps, so you can use it as a standalone smart TV as well – and there are built-in speakers you can make use of too. Tilt: -20º to 20º (Auto/Manual) Height: 160mm (Auto/Manual) Swivel: ±270º (Manual) Pivot: Not Available Extend/Retract: 300mm For starters, it’s dim. Similar to the UltraGear OLED 27, this monitor tops out at around 200 nits of brightness. With a 3% window, LG claims up to 1,000 nits, but I only measured 780. Low brightness is typical of OLED, and although some may cry foul at a notion of a dimmer monitor, it was never too dim for me to work on during testing.On the Corsair model sure not on this LG its fixed as per the article.Both solutions don't appeal to me. Flexible screen sounds nice, but I feel it is more marketing than it being really useful since not many people will keep changing the degree of curve. LG's solution however is too curved. While Alienware's QD OLED monitor is not a direct comparison to these 2, I think the fixed curve and size works best. And its UltraFine Display Ergo AI 32-inch model can continuously adjust screen position for user-comfort.

LG UltraGear 45GR95QE-B review: “Overwhelms my eyes in the

Now, thanks to the 3440×1440 resolution, you still get plenty of screen real estate, it’s just that details and text won’t be particularly sharp. For games and videos, this won’t be an issue at all. The pixels transition rapidly regardless of the refresh rate, so there’s no need for different overdrive settings. If you're doing anything besides gaming with the LG UltraGear 45GR95QE, it's not quite as impressive, while still clearly being one of the best monitors around. It doesn't quite hit a 4K resolution which means the definition of diagrams and text can be a little underwhelming – it's by no means a huge problem, but something to consider if you're planning to use this monitor for both work and play. It’s not the same as other OLEDs I’ve reviewed, though. Similar to LG’s 27-inch model and Asus’ OLED rival, this monitor comes with a 240Hz refresh rate. And due to using an OLED panel, it has very low response times. That leads to exceptional motion clarity, which is great if you play competitive games like Overwatch 2and Valorant. In HDR, the monitor can achieve a high 800-nit peak brightness for small bright highlights (<3%), a decent 650-nits for 10% white windows and 160-nits for full-screen bright flashes.Screen Saver – screen turns off automatically when no movement is detected after a certain period of time The screen is 45″ in size (44.75″ to be exact) with an ultrawide format and 21:9 aspect ratio. It has a very steep 800R curvature as well. The screen has a fairly low 3440 x 1440 resolution for the screen size, but also offers a 0.03ms G2G response time spec, 1.5 million:1 contrast ratio, 178/178 viewing angles, 1.07b colour depth and a wide 98.5% DCI-P3 colour gamut. The screen comes factory calibrated but (rare for a gaming screen) the display also offers hardware calibration support which is great news.

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