The MSI MPG 272QRF X36 is a 27″ 1440p 360Hz IPS gaming monitor with the G-SYNC Pulsar technology, which provides you with simultaneous VRR and MBR performance, tuned by NVIDIA and MediaTek via their new scaler. Other known specs include a 0.5ms GtG response time speed, HDMI 2.1 connec...
At the moment, simultaneous VRR and MBR performance is possible on some displays without the native G-SYNC module via Gigabyte’s Aim Stabilizer Sync, ASUS’ ELMB-SYNC and similar implementations. However, the actual performance is mostly lackluster due to strobe crosstalk and similar visual artifac...
The main cause is a slow (or high) response time. Most monitors today are marketed to offer <5 ms MPRT (Moving Picture Response Time) or G2G (Grey-to-Grey). Despite that, mostLCD displays are still prone to these artifacts. As we know, displays are composed of pixels that go through...
BFI itself is merely a stop-gap to MPRT motion clarity improvement like G-SYNC is to tearing-prevention on the road to eventual non-finite framerates and refresh rates. But yes, legacy games limited by lower fixed framerates will always be an issue where non-strobed MPRT is concerned, san...
Combining a 180Hz refresh rate with a 0.5ms MPRT response time and AMD FreeSync™ Premium, theOMNI VX28 Seriesof fast IPS monitors is great for immersive gaming. Available in 24” and 27” sizes, these monitors are equipped with HDR10 to add a level of realism to games with greate...
Quest 2 has 0.3ms MPRT strobing. You can even virtualize a zero-blur display in VR, so you can play 2D and yesteryear stereoscopic 3D games onto a VR screen (virtualized computer monitor), using things like Virtual Desktop or BigScreen. ...