Resolution vs frequency vs curved vs ?? for gaming enjoyment

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Morning all. In an upgrade thread on the main forum it's been pointed out to me that my monitors are old, crap, and are really limiting my upgrade options.

This...might be true. But given that I don't have all the new shiny, I don't know what I'm missing. So that's my question to you fine people. Given all of the advances since my 1080p, 60hz flatscreens... what am I missing? Will it improve my gaming? Is it just a waste of money? Is it massively dependent on [some factor] that's not obvious?

What do I not know which would help me understand this?
 
Freesync and high refresh is worth it mine is freesync 144hz so no longer locked to 60hz and lag issues with it also if it's 80hz sticks to 80hz and it doesn't have to be 144hz all the, depending on the game, RTS will be higher, FPS lower, but it's still synced
 
I agree with the above, if you are into games, particularly anything online if you want to be competitive, a 144hz monitor is much better.

Also for me personally, 1440p is just such a noticeable difference over 1080p, I'd literally never go back, but it does push your hardware, I'd say at a complete uneducated stab in the dark about 20% more demanding.

Problem is, a 1440p monitor with 144hz refresh = £££££££££££

Still, it's not something you'll buy often.
 
Smoother. Also with vsync if is isn't 60hz then it drops down to 30hz.

Whatever the GPU is outputting whether it's 30 or 200 it'll output the 30hz at 30hz and GPU will drop 200hz to 144hz and be synced
 
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Smoother. Also with vsync if is isn't 60hz then it drops down to 30hz.

Yea it isn't just like the FPS you see, they say your eyes/brain can't see past a certain FPS, I've personally always called ******** on that, and even if you can't see the higher FPS, you can certainly feel it through the game, it's the only way I can explain it.
 
Will it improve my gaming?
Do photos look better in standard 4x6 prints or something bigger?
And 2560x1440 improves all PC use, including web surfing because you can actually fit something on screen without so much scrolling down and up.
It wouldn't be so bad if you had proper monitor resolution 1920x1200.
But scamming machine called marketing cut that down to **** poor medieval 1080 vertical pixels.


But what difference does that make to your gameplay?
Variable refresh rate of display allows artifact free and smooth image even when PC can't output frames constantly at same pace as monitor's refresh rate.
So it doesn't matter if in some game your PC can reach only 100, or 80 fps (or occasionally dipping to that 60) instead of 144fps.
Earlier avoiding either image artifacts or stutter would have needed cutting game settings down enough to get fps up to 144, or then cutting down on resolution.
(or buying expensive enough PC to reach that 144fps)
 
A curved monitor restricts your head position but gives you a better experience when your head is in that position. Gsync and freesync are great at making gameplay seem smoother, especially at lower frame rates, and eliminate screen tearing. High refresh rates make the screen easier on the eye and make fast-paced action more fluid. Unless you're a pro gamer, anything over 100 Hz is just gravy, though if you're not using adaptive sync then you want 120 Hz+ to maintain that 60 fps minimum.

None of these technologies can improve your skill; they will, however, give you a superior gaming experience.
 
Problem is, a 1440p monitor with 144hz refresh = £££££££££££
Considering the prices people are willing to pay from...
- Nvidia's graphics card with bad performance for money and no real future proofing value.
- Or Intel's yester-yesteryear's CPUs on dead end upgrade path platform
- Or Samsung extras in SSD prices​
2560x1440 monitors aren't expensive compared to usage life of monitor.

https://www.overclockers.co.uk/aoc-...een-led-backlit-gaming-monitor-mo-057-ao.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/msi-...een-led-backlit-gaming-monitor-mo-00l-ms.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/aoc-...-widescreen-led-gaming-monitor-mo-04w-ao.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/acer...r400-widescreen-gaming-monitor-mo-14b-ac.html

In fact lots of 1920x1080 monitors are in comparison ridiculously expensive for medieval resolution, small sizes and TN panels.
 
A few years ago I upgraded my 1080p 144Hz monitor to a 4k 60Hz IPS monitor, 4k looked fantastic, but I hated the actual gaming experience, I couldn't get over the low refresh rate.
I only kept it a few months and palmed it off to the wife to use on her photo editing machine and bought a 1440p 144Hz freesync replacement, which imo is the perfect middle ground of being good looking, smooth, and not a lot more demanding to drive than 1080p when compared to 4k.
you might pay a bit for a good monitor, but it's not an upgrade you make very often and is basically the output of your PC and dose dictate a lot of your user experience.
 
Considering the prices people are willing to pay from...
- Nvidia's graphics card with bad performance for money and no real future proofing value.
- Or Intel's yester-yesteryear's CPUs on dead end upgrade path platform
- Or Samsung extras in SSD prices​
2560x1440 monitors aren't expensive compared to usage life of monitor.

https://www.overclockers.co.uk/aoc-...een-led-backlit-gaming-monitor-mo-057-ao.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/msi-...een-led-backlit-gaming-monitor-mo-00l-ms.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/aoc-...-widescreen-led-gaming-monitor-mo-04w-ao.html
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/acer...r400-widescreen-gaming-monitor-mo-14b-ac.html

In fact lots of 1920x1080 monitors are in comparison ridiculously expensive for medieval resolution, small sizes and TN panels.


Yea I completely agree it's worth it. Price puts people off though.
 
Freesync/G-sync is definitely worth it if you can afford it. While most freesync monitors support Nvidia cards anyway, its a safer bet if you have or planning to buy an nvidia card to get one with G-sync, or Gsync compatibility due to possible issues.

With regards. I've always prefered 1440p high refresh over everything. 21:9, 4k, you name it. Not a fan of ultrawides personally.

144hz is far smoother than 60hz in both normal and competitive gameplay. One of the biggest upgrades i have made. 1440p again the sweetspot and plenty crisp enough, decent jump from 1080p.

I'd go with a decent 27"/32" 1440p 144hz panel.
 
It depends on your current GPU and your budget. Some of the newest games (like Assasins Creed Odyssey and RDR 2) now really push even the best graphics cards, I think ensuring you get 60FPS at 1080p (or perhaps QHD) in all games is the way to go for smooth gameplay.

So a GPU is a much better investment than a 144hz monitor, which is pointless if your GPU can't handle that many frames.
 
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