Hey all, so I'm looking for people a lot smarter than me with hardware to point me in the right direction here. A few years ago I built a new PC. It has a GTX 1080 TI SC which was the best out at the time.. not sure how good it is anymore. But anyways, I spent about $3000 and never upgraded my monitors (I know, don't roast me too hard please
)..
Anyways, I'm looking to upgrade my monitors, I have a BenQ one right now which I've had for years when I was playing CoD competitively, but the colors suck, it's like a 1ms response time one.. and I have a shitty Walmart Acer monitor which I've dropped and hit and damaged and still runs like a champ, but it's years old now lol... and isn't even 1080p.
So.. I'm assuming I can run 4k or maybe 2k anyways with my current build, I think I'd be getting a 4k monitor anyways just to kinda future proof.. response time doesn't matter too much as I've pretty much quit shooters. I'm looking for a nice picture and quality.. I'm also undecided on two monitors or just a big like 34-40ish+ inch monitor than I can section off into two maybe? And also, GSync or no GSync??
Ideas? Suggestions? I don't really have a price range, maybe something in the middle. Not top end but not terrible... I'm in Canada btw if you post links.. thanks so much as usual.
Comments
Your current PC is good enough for those but if you move to 4K you will definitely notice the performance loss when 4K gaming so that will likely be just the start of upgrading everything
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I wouldn't recommend a 4K monitor unless it's huge. The problem is that if you get a lot of pixels but not a lot of inches, then the pixels are tiny. Some programs will handle that well, and some just make everything so small that the program is awkward to use. If you get a 4K monitor, I'd recommend getting one that is around 40". If you get something with a 2560x1440 resolution, you probably want at least 27" in size.
The choice of one large monitor or two (or three) smaller ones is a matter of personal preference. I personally prefer multiple monitors, but some people prefer just one bigger one. How you use it makes some difference, as the bezels between monitors are far less intrusive if you're running different programs on different monitors than if you always maximize everything and spread it across all of the monitors. If you do want to spread a game window across multiple monitors, you'd want three, not two, as you want the dividing bezels off to the side some, not right in the middle of the screen.
Make sure that you check on exactly what your video card supports. Check the monitor ports, as well as the resolutions and refresh rates on those monitor ports. I have a different card from you (Radeon RX Vega 64), but to give you an example, it supports 2560x1440 at up to 144 Hz over DisplayPort, and only up to 60 Hz over HDMI. You probably want to use DisplayPort for your new monitors if you can, but even then, a 4K resolution is likely to cap you at 60 Hz or so. There's no sense in spending extra for a monitor that has a higher resolution or refresh rate than your video card can handle. You also don't want to get two identical monitors and then realize that your card only has one of the type of monitor port that they need.
A GeForce GTX 1080 Ti is still a plenty fast card today. Getting that level of performance in a new card today would cost about $400.
If you're looking to upgrade your video card, I generally recommend getting at least double the performance of the old one. You can't do that at the moment, but probably will be able to later this year when AMD launches Navi 2X. Nvidia will launch Ampere eventually (and possibly even before Navi 2X), but so far, all that they've been willing to talk about publicly is an A100 compute device that is half GPU and half machine learning ASIC. In contrast, AMD has publicly promised that Navi 2X will launch sometime this year. If you have a strong preference for Nvidia, then I'd wait to see if Ampere is any good before upgrading.
So I'll look for a 1440p, FreeSync monitor that's G-Sync compatible, that isn't a TN panel.
Also I just checked, my current "main" monitor is a BenQ XL2420T, so yeah. It's old & a TN panel apparently.
Are there any brands anybody would recommend over others? Or is it all preference really? I mean I'm really happy with how long this crappy Acer monitor has lasted even when I've dropped it and smashed it (on accident) more than a few times lol...
Also apparently "At the rear of the 1080 Ti there are three DisplayPort 1.4 ports alongside an HDMI 2.0 port."
So I should be able to support two displayport monitors without a problem.
IPS isn't the only good type of panel, but it is the common one that doesn't cost that much. OLED looks better, but it also costs a fortune. If you're not sure what a panel type is, the viewing angles are usually a pretty good indicator. TN will typically be something like 160 or 170 degrees, while IPS is more like 178 degrees. The viewing angle isn't an important spec in itself, but it is a function of the panel type.
Unless the text you quoted comes from your particular SKU (e.g., if you still have the box it came in and are reading the box), then you need to make sure that you check the monitor ports on your particular video card. That is, look at the back of the card and physically inspect the ports there to see what they are. Different SKUs with the same GPU inside often attach different ports. For example, these are both a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti:
https://www.newegg.com/evga-geforce-gtx-1080-ti-11g-p4-6696-kr/p/N82E16814487338
https://www.newegg.com/asus-geforce-gtx-1080-ti-turbo-gtx1080ti-11g/p/N82E16814126188
But the first one has 3 DisplayPort, 1 HDMI, and 1 DVI, while the second has 2 DisplayPort, 2 HDMI, and no DVI. You don't want to buy two monitors and then discover that you can't plug them both in at once.
Thanks Quizz!
I personally don't see the point in GSync beyond a certain point, you will be spending more just to checkmark some nVidia extra. With a 144hz refresh rate, the fact your frame is held up that long doesn't make a difference when most gaming is done at 60 fps.
The quality of a monitor is always dictated by price. If you find something with a low MSRP, there is probably a reason for it.
GTX 1080 TI is still a good graphic card. For example in this recent test it beat RX 5700 XT by 9%. Source: https://www.techspot.com/review/1907-geforce-1080-ti-vs-rtx-2070-super-vs-radeon-5700-xt/
Using that 9% as performance difference, Navi 2X would need to be 118% faster than RX 5700 XT.
We know that AMD has promised Navi 2X will give 50% more performance per watt used compared to their current cards. If they manage to fully keep that promise, the Navi 2X card offering twice the performance of GTX 1080 TI would have TPD of 327 Watts. And that's the best-case scenario where AMD's marketing department has been truthful. Even if AMD could fit enough transistors into a single GPU, I don't think they're going to go for that high TDP in a consumer GPU.
That's not to say it wouldn't be good idea to wait for new GPU launches before upgrading from 1080 Ti. 1080 Ti is still so good that right now it makes little sense to upgrade, but in the next generation either AMD or NVidia might have something good enough to make upgrade worthwhile.
There was a review here and a few online about the value of this item and here they were selling for $449.99 US, a real steal, for what you get. It is a 34" qhd 3440x1440, va panel by Samsung; 144 hz refresh, with freesync and other nice specs (see reviews).
I am using one for gaming and just love it. I retired my 34" ips Lg 60hz with no qualms.
Also, 4k is not really for competitive play - with current HW you won't get sufficient FPS at that resolution. Maybe with the upcoming cards we'll be closer, but for now 1080 or 1440 will be much better for competitive play.
If you want to slow down and enjoy the graphics instead of competing, then a large 4k IPS screen from a specialist company would be optimal. I recommend Eizo - but then I might be biased after all these years...
There's a huge number of different errors that can cause blue screen of death, including but not limited to:
-hardware problems
-problems with drivers
-problems with operating system
-sometimes problems with other software
I do like DMKano's idea of having two (or more) monitors
And I can speak for 4K monitors. I've run 4K 27" for a while now. Some people say that's too small.
For gaming - yeah, 4K sucks.
But for everything else, it's awesome. I run at 150% scaling, so all the text/icons are the same size as they would be on a 1440p monitor, but text and still images are a good deal crisper, since you have a much higher PPI.
Not everything scales well, Windows scaling isn't the best, but it works with most modern things - it's mostly just the old Win32 stuff that still struggles a bit.
I won't trade my small 4K's for anything for day to day use. The clarity is really noticeable to me. But just for gaming - yeah, I concede they certainly aren't the thing, but that's why you have the separate second (or third) monitor for gaming...
But I'm going to say that your blue screen is due to an unstable overclock. After all, without more information, all we can do is guess wildly.
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.
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.
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.
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.
If a cable was capable of outputting 1000hz, the OLED is still capable of outputting it. It's also why GSync is completely pointless on OLED.
The problem with 4k gaming is simple. No single GPU is capable of a consistent 60 fps on demanding modern titles.
If being the best possible in highly competitive, twitchy e-sports is the priority, then yeah, as DMKano said, you'd want very high refresh rate, very low latency, very low resolution, and ugly image quality. For anyone else, that's a dumb thing to get.
Exactly!
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.