I have newtoyitis and my knowledge is out of date

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5 Dec 2003
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I want a new toy and the only piece of kit I can reasonably upgrade in a way that I would notice without spending silly money is my monitor...so that's my target for a new toy.

The problem is that what I know about monitors is out of date, so I'm going to ask for advice on here.

My current monitor is a Samsung SyncMaster B2430. 24 inch, 1920x1080, 60Hz. Nice quality and still perfectly functional, but a bit dated now.

Graphics card is a 1070 Ti with superb cooling that boosts to silly levels. At stock volts, it's limited only by power draw and if I feed it max power it outperforms a 1080. I run it at stock, but I did overclock it just for benchmarking as a "How high can you go?" thing. CPU is an i7-4790K, so between the two I think I can go a bit higher than 1920x1080. 2560x1440 looks like the best bet for me.

Size-wise, I think ~28 inches would be the best size. I think more than that would probably be too big and less than that would probably not be quite the upgrade I want.

G-Sync would be nice, but I'm not convinced it's worth the extra ~£200 it costs.

I don't know how much difference refresh rate makes, so I can't make a good decision on that. TN? IPS?

I want no dead pixels. If I have to pay extra for a monitor that works properly, i.e. all the pixels work, so be it.

My sensible budget limit is ~£300 because this is just a toy I don't really need, but that's not set in stone either way. I'm tempted by that remarkably cheap AOC monitor that's selling like hot cakes (£200 for a 32 inch 2560x1440 monitor!), especially after reading reviews of it that say it's surprisingly good and far better than the price implies, but the size puts me off.
 
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