What monitor do (You) use?

what monitor do (You) use?

Attached: 1659860779901.jpg (1000x1000, 110.18K)

A budget 4k, 43" commercial grade NEC panel, because it was 300 bucks and does everything I want.

Attached: iiyama-prolite-xb2783hsu-b3-27-fhd-a-mva--led-75hz-monitor.jpg (1000x1000, 81.16K)

It has acer written on the bottom.

It's pretty okay.

Attached: Samsung Odyssey G7 (1).jpg (2260x1504, 1.67M)

27" 4K 60Hz IPS

43 inch entry level QLED Samsung TV.
Using PC is now more comfortable than ever, no more bending down when playing shooters.
The input lag is on par with monitors with more recent TVs

Two 22'' monitors, one I got for free somewhere and other I literally found while working and just brought it home.
I'm not poor or anything, but fuck I'll take two perfectly working monitors for free.

aoc 24g2

Hands down the best monitor I've ever owned for both creative work for color and gaming, I autisticly took back 3-monitors before this because everything looked like fucking piss, I was actually disheartened how bad most monitors are in current year, would buy it again in a heartbeat and probably will

Attached: lg_ultragear_27gl850_27_144hz_qhd_1ms_hdr_gsync_ready_nano_ips_gaming_monitor_ac25642_8.jpg (800x800, 121.03K)

Basecer

Been using this for 4 years now.

Attached: acer xg270hu.jpg (1027x578, 278.85K)

Have you calibrated those previous monitors properly?
I've had people spend a lot of money on monitors before and telling me they look like shit, which was true because they were terribly calibrated. After some proper calibration they looked great.

I've been using Samsung monitors for 20 years

How do you prefer to calibrate it? I tried a site on google once but I don't think it worked well

you need to buy a $500 tool to calibrate your $300 monitor

Attached: IMG_20220807_054104.jpg (4000x2992, 3.5M)

YO THAT'S ME ON THE SCREENSHOT

Got a 27" 1440p@165hz Lenovo with an IPS panel brand new for 180 euros shipped late last year
Turns out it's basically leftover stock mashed together. It got discontinued after only like a year on the market, the service menu in the firmware thinks it's a 32" VA panel (it's definitely not), there's no firmware updates for it and the OSD is an awful buggy mess.
But the picture quality is fine. A bit smeary at times on high refresh rates but I don't mind. Freesync is way better than I would've thought.

34" Ultrawide
>nb4 fell for meme
I didn't buy it, my brother got it for me as an Xmas gift. It's pretty neat for productivity. Gaming is hit or miss depending on support or workarounds. Can't really game on a 16:9 unless it's a 4K TV

27" Samsung G5. It's entry level but 1440p, 144hz and VRR implementation is fine and were the main reasons I upgraded.

I've had my Dell S2417DG for about 6 years now. I'm itching to upgrade to something better, and I've been doing my best to research into new monitors. So far I'm thinking of going for the M32UC. It seems like a really big upgrade to the Dell I currently have and even though something like the Neo G8 is better still, that comes at almost double the price. I feel like I won't miss dimming zones if I've never had them anyway.

Anyone have some advice or thoughts for me?

Attached: s2417dg.jpg (1280x720, 89.95K)

i use some tv connected to my gaming laptop as second monitor to post on Any Forums

Pixio PX248P. 24". For being under 200 dollars, it's a pretty damn quality 144hz IPS monitor. yeah it's barebones when it comes to features, but who gives a shit about getting fancy with your monitor? colors look fine enough to me, being an IPS panel and all, so I find it good enough for my needs. I just kinda wish my desk had enough space for my 2nd, old monitor

Attached: Pixio-PX248P-gaming-monitor_09b225f6-6904-49e1-9d91-d8a0cd0e5f47.png (3000x2299, 2.14M)