It’s not a big curve really 1700R it’ fine to me just right.How is the curve on the 32"? Been holding out for a 32" 4K OLED monitor/TV so this could be the year.
It’s not a big curve really 1700R it’ fine to me just right.How is the curve on the 32"? Been holding out for a 32" 4K OLED monitor/TV so this could be the year.
So far so good loving the colours and trying to get used to coming from a 34 ws.
That'll cost another £5I just know those numpties at From Software won't patch in UW with the Elden Ring DLC.
I was a bit unsure when ordering to be honest but I really like it. I use it for both work and gaming and I actually prefer it now I've been using it a few days.How is the curve on the 32"? Been holding out for a 32" 4K OLED monitor/TV so this could be the year.
Don't really notice it myself, it's only like 1800/1700R iirc
It’s not a big curve really 1700R it’ fine to me just right.
I was a bit unsure when ordering to be honest but I really like it. I use it for both work and gaming and I actually prefer it now I've been using it a few days.
You barely even notice it, this is the first curved monitor I`ve owned and I hardly notice it all.How is the curve on the 32"? Been holding out for a 32" 4K OLED monitor/TV so this could be the year.
I noticed it initially...then after that first day I haven't noticed it really since Your eyes quickly get used to it as it's not that extreme.How is the curve on the 32"? Been holding out for a 32" 4K OLED monitor/TV so this could be the year.
That'll cost another £5
I watched one review on YouTube that said the curve of the AW3225QF was fine for games and video editing but perhaps not ideal for, say, CAD software were you need to have straight lines suggesting that the curve perhaps isn't as subtle as suggested.
Personally, I would hate to use any curved display monitor due to the way they warp and distort reflections and light. I mean the image is 2D anyway so I do not see what point the curve serves on a 16:9 display. Perhaps on an ultra wide it might be useful but then I do not like those monitors either, mostly because of the lack of support for that aspect ratio in games and having black bars appear on the left and right side of the screen constantly would drive me nuts. I accept it for the 4:3 stuff such as my Space: 1999, Doctor Who and Babylon 5 Blu-rays because of their age and I can watch them on a night where the deep blacks of OLED mean I forget the borders are there but I play games during the day and at night so it is less acceptable for a PC display.
Frustrating as they finally learned with Armored Core.
Flawless Widescreen works perfect as well, there's not even any UW jank. But it disables online play which is a big part of these games.
I have decided though I cannot go without UW, so I'll either be buying into the current UW OLEDs or waiting a bit longer to see what comes later this year in regards to UW. 175hz is enough for me, as is the current brightness levels, but at less than 4K it'll be interesting to see if a new pixel array comes in newer panels so no fringing.
A mild curve on UW is nice, like I'm currently 1500R on my monitor. As it's VA it helps a bit as well with viewing angle side on tint at edges. 34" without a curve might be doable, but I still think it's best with UW. Above 34" and I'd say a curve is mandatory for your eyes.
But I don't think I'd want a curve on a 32" 16:9.
I used to have a 1440p 32" monitor a couple of years ago which was a Samsung Odyssey and that curve was quite agressive.
I would say the AW 32" curve is very subtle and hardly noticeable.
I actually like it and I think it's suited quite well to the size of screen.
I'm a 3d artist and wfh using this display. I deal with cad and poly modelling. If you ever need deadly straight lines its either locked to an axis when extruding or you can use an orthographical view anyway. In my opinion its been a non issue. I don't really even notice the curve.I watched one review on YouTube that said the curve of the AW3225QF was fine for games and video editing but perhaps not ideal for, say, CAD software were you need to have straight lines suggesting that the curve perhaps isn't as subtle as suggested.
Personally, I would hate to use any curved display monitor due to the way they warp and distort reflections and light. I mean the image is 2D anyway so I do not see what point the curve serves on a 16:9 display. Perhaps on an ultra wide it might be useful but then I do not like those monitors either, mostly because of the lack of support for that aspect ratio in games and having black bars appear on the left and right side of the screen constantly would drive me nuts. I accept it for the 4:3 stuff such as my Space: 1999, Doctor Who and Babylon 5 Blu-rays because of their age and I can watch them on a night where the deep blacks of OLED mean I forget the borders are there but I play games during the day and at night so it is less acceptable for a PC display.
Sweet, they was actually early with itLooks like there is a new firmware update that allows for the toggle of Dolby Vision in the OSD for the AW3225QF
With your hands..?everybody recommending to attached the stand first and lift the monitor by grabbing its stand, but how to grab the monitor, in case i want to put my monitor on my monitor arm instead, which is infact attached to my desk?
Two weeks of use now and I'm really enjoying the 27" 1440p OLED monitor. I'm not taking advantage of the 360hz in many games (only Overwatch 2...) but the actual panel is fantastic. The colours are brilliant, the black levels are fantastic and it works really well with the PS5.
I do wish we could disable DSC over DP - and it would have been great to have the full spec HDMI 2.1 vs. the gimped port we were given. Two HDMI ports would have been good too vs. having two display ports.
Relating to the headaches I mentioned a few pages back, it definitely seemed to be linked to reading a lot of text on screen and working on the monitor vs. gaming on it.
I have two setups, one for WFH and one for home/gaming but after I got the new monitor I was using one setup for everything just to use the monitor as much as possible. After swapping the OLED monitor back to being just the home/gaming monitor and going back to my original work monitor the headaches/eye strain immediately disappeared.
A lot of my job is reading huge amounts of text/giant spreadsheets/mapping docs and I think the brightness of the OLED monitor and the way it handles text was having an impact on that.