I have been looking at articles recently to try to figure this out but I always value actual experience (also theory) in these situations.
I am wanting a
larger monitor for a few reasons: (24" up to 27")
- I am having some pretty bad eye strain (also going to adjust lighting). I am considering an "eye care" monitor from ASUS (could just be gimmicks)
- I would like more screen real estate to run Foundry for VTT games (although it might just make things larger depending on how it scales)
- I am getting older. . I feel like I am constantly leaning into my 24" 1080 screen (it is about 3-4 feet away
I am considering 4k on the understanding that it produces exactly 4x the pixels and I am hoping I can get a crisp 1080 image
-I might upgrade my video card in the future to an RTX 30 something or other when they are more available (in the next year maybe)
For non gaming applications:-I am thinking with FoundryVTT and work apps I might run at 4k and can scale the UI and have more space without things being too pixelated.
I would consider 1440 but I think I will likely skip past that. I can do a 1080 monitor fairly cheap and get 4k later if I go that route.
My current hardware:
-AMD Ryzen 5 3600
-GTX 1060 6GB
has anyone gamed at 1080 on a 4K
I assume I can run documents, less graphics-intensive applications, etc at 4K without a problem when I am working?
I was considering this 1080 monitor:
linkIf I was going 4K I might go with something like this :
https://www.amazon.ca/Gaming-VG289Q-Monitor-FreeSync-DisplayPort/dp/B0845NXCXF/ref=sr_1_8?dchild=1&keywords=asus+eye+care+monitor+27+4k&qid=1611846543&s=pc&sr=1-8
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Comments
for 1st link
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
4k is great for text and static images (web browsing, content creation, etc), but it’s still too soon for great gaming.
My 2cp - coming from running 4K monitors for the last couple of years.
Logic, my dear, merely enables one to be wrong with great authority.
Your post is a little bit like someone who comes in asking for video card advice and wants help choosing between a $200 card and a $700 card. (Well, other than that those video cards are both out of stock right now.) If that's your range, then have you considered something in between? In monitor terms, if you're considering both 1920x1080 and 3840x2160, then you really should also consider 2560x1440.
If you're having eye strain issues, then I'd definitely get a good quality IPS monitor. Asus Eye Care seems to mean:
1) the monitor won't flicker (which is true of any reasonably good monitor), and
2) they have an option to make the colors display wrong by turning down the blue light (which you probably won't use).
There are apparently people who think that reducing the blue light you see shortly before you go to bed will help you sleep. I don't know if there's any real basis for that or if it's just garbage.
If the problem is that you're leaning toward the monitor to make it closer, have you considered moving the monitor to be closer to where you sit?
I suffer from eye strain, and turning blue light down on my monitor helps. Also when working I try to use office programs that allow me to have yellowish background instead of white, because the white background starts to hurt my eyes much more than yellow background does.
Eye strain and what causes it varies from person to person, so even if reducing blue light helps me, that doesn't mean it'd help everyone with eye strain.
Logic, my dear, merely enables one to be wrong with great authority.
If you are getting 4k to read, then definitely go 4k. There is a difference between 4k and 1440p in how they display text at 27/28".
I've only experienced scaling issues when using more than 1 monitor at different resolutions and HDR capability on a direct 4:1 downscale.
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
I think I will look at 1440. I think the reason I was skipping it is that 1080 is cheap and I didn't want to go 4K later (in a year maybe and have a 1440 monitor kicking around.
I am going to check it out though. I am glad you mentioned IPS. I was looking at one monitor that now turns out to not have been IPS. that would have been bad.
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
Wa min God! Se æx on min heafod is!
2560x1440 is a common resolution for monitors. Yeah, it will tend to be more expensive than 1920x1080, but I'd still expect it to be cheaper than 4K.
What to do about eye strain depends on why you think you're having eye strain problems. If everything is too small and hard for you to see, that's very different from if it is a strain to look at a monitor at all even when it's just pictures.
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The GeForce RTX 3000 series didn't improve its performance per watt by much over the 2000 series. Rather, it allowed higher performance by blowing out the power budget, kind of like what Intel did with its successive refreshes of Sky Lake CPUs.
Nvidia had been slightly ahead of AMD in performance per watt last generation, but AMD got a big jump there in the new generation and Nvidia didn't, leaving AMD substantially ahead on performance per watt. But you can't really solve that by just buying a Radeon RX 6000 series card instead, as those cards barely exist because AMD has chosen to prioritize more lucrative Zen 3 CPUs over Navi 2X GPUs with its limited supply of wafers from TSMC. AMD is getting quite a lot of wafers from TSMC, but there's really a lot of demand for Zen 3.
Really, though, if you're going to spend $700 on a video card, then $150 for a power supply to feed it isn't that outlandish.
The pixel pitch of those two sizes and resolutions are the same so the transition was very easy for things like text readability (I have mild cataracts that need taking care of soon) but the resolution increase in games is noticeable not to mention totally eliminating screen tear thanks to nVidia's Gsync over Freesync.
It's also a great size for more immersive movie and TV streaming.
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https://www.sleepfoundation.org/bedroom-environment/blue-light
Brenics ~ Just to point out I do believe Chris Roberts is going down as the man who cheated backers and took down crowdfunding for gaming.