I got my BL2400PT today (same panel as the ew2420).
I can confirm that it's semi glossy.
Good points: The stand is excellent, the AG coating isn't visible (clean whites), the blacks are very nice, the panel is responsive enough for gaming - I can't notice it in games I've tried. Viewing angles are excellent (the colour shifts a little compared to IPS but it's miles better than TN).
Bad points: I have the 'dark finger' effect (dark shapes on whites) as mentioned here - doesn't bother me much though. I had to turn up digital vibrance to 60% because the monitor seems a bit washed out without it. The image isn't as crisp/sharp as it could be (compared to my apple cinema display) - even with the sharpness turned up to the max.
Overall - for £170 the monitor is brilliant value. It feels much nicer than my g2420hdbl did. However, if you aren't willing to play with it then I think the 2420hdbl looked nicer out of the box.
Something that might be useful to someone - this monitor comes with 'eye protect' enabled in the menu, which dims the backlight even if set to 100%.
Also, there is no 'game' mode - not sure what difference this makes.
Here are some videos comparing to an LG TN monitor:
Black level test in Toy Story 2 intro:
Quick demo of call of duty & some viewing angle tests:
I can confirm that it's semi glossy.
Good points: The stand is excellent, the AG coating isn't visible (clean whites), the blacks are very nice, the panel is responsive enough for gaming - I can't notice it in games I've tried. Viewing angles are excellent (the colour shifts a little compared to IPS but it's miles better than TN).
Bad points: I have the 'dark finger' effect (dark shapes on whites) as mentioned here - doesn't bother me much though. I had to turn up digital vibrance to 60% because the monitor seems a bit washed out without it. The image isn't as crisp/sharp as it could be (compared to my apple cinema display) - even with the sharpness turned up to the max.
Overall - for £170 the monitor is brilliant value. It feels much nicer than my g2420hdbl did. However, if you aren't willing to play with it then I think the 2420hdbl looked nicer out of the box.
Something that might be useful to someone - this monitor comes with 'eye protect' enabled in the menu, which dims the backlight even if set to 100%.
Also, there is no 'game' mode - not sure what difference this makes.
Here are some videos comparing to an LG TN monitor:
Black level test in Toy Story 2 intro:
Quick demo of call of duty & some viewing angle tests:

sRGB and Standard being tolerable out of the box, but are set too bright. Without the Eye Protect (Ambient Light) Sensor in operation, it was a bit too straining in a normal office setting.
Just wondering if it is a batch or per-unit issue. Cheers in advance.
