Hi.
Can someone who has a brain larger than mine explain to me why there seems to be few if any G-Sync monitors which are able to accommodate split screen - i.e two inputs on the one display. Having spent an evening and morning researching this it looks like Freesync monitors can do it but g-sync cannot. I was just looking at press releases and details on the latest LG Gaming monitors which offer split 2.0 (split screen input) but only on Freesync, a search on pip or pbs or split doesn't yield much either. The 35" Predators would be ideal for gaming and even better if dual input was an option but alas it seems no .
Am I am alone in working for a living and also enjoying a good game pc or console, so the relatively large investment in a wholly gaming screen is a little hard to justify. Whereas cash on say a 34" wide screen gaming monitor which could also be used to display two inputs simultaneously from two sources would be a lot easier to justify.
I'm about to invest in a new gaming rig / work setup with an Nvidia GTX1080TI, now I'm wondering if it was a mistake and I should go for a dual AMD graphics card package.
Is this a specification limitation on the Nvidia solution, or should I not worry about the added benefit of G-Sync and go for a widescreen monitor with high refresh and split screen input ?
Any suggestions - constructive - ha , would be appreciated.
Can someone who has a brain larger than mine explain to me why there seems to be few if any G-Sync monitors which are able to accommodate split screen - i.e two inputs on the one display. Having spent an evening and morning researching this it looks like Freesync monitors can do it but g-sync cannot. I was just looking at press releases and details on the latest LG Gaming monitors which offer split 2.0 (split screen input) but only on Freesync, a search on pip or pbs or split doesn't yield much either. The 35" Predators would be ideal for gaming and even better if dual input was an option but alas it seems no .
Am I am alone in working for a living and also enjoying a good game pc or console, so the relatively large investment in a wholly gaming screen is a little hard to justify. Whereas cash on say a 34" wide screen gaming monitor which could also be used to display two inputs simultaneously from two sources would be a lot easier to justify.
I'm about to invest in a new gaming rig / work setup with an Nvidia GTX1080TI, now I'm wondering if it was a mistake and I should go for a dual AMD graphics card package.
Is this a specification limitation on the Nvidia solution, or should I not worry about the added benefit of G-Sync and go for a widescreen monitor with high refresh and split screen input ?
Any suggestions - constructive - ha , would be appreciated.