![]() ![]() Firstly, it's an absolutely and you'd think needlessly massive brick given it only outputs a relatively modest 220W.Įven worse, it plugs into the back of the display with the shonkiest barrel connector you could possibly imagine. But the worst detail involves the power supply. All the inputs are very hard to get at, partly because you plug everything in parallel to the rear of the chassis rather than at 90 degrees. That said, there are a couple of niggles. ![]() The OLED panel tech also means that the panel enclosure can be super thin. It looks ultra modern and minimalist and feels very nicely put together. On the build and engineering side of things, well, this monitor is simply gorgeous. Note that the USB-C socket is only for the hub, it isn't a display interface and doesn't have power delivery either, which is a pity and something you might expect to have been thrown in on this class and price of monitor. Slightly frustratingly, Samsung doesn't quote maximum HDR brightness, although the panel is DisplayHDR True Black 400.įor connectivity, you get DisplayPort, HDMI and mini HDMI, plus a USB hub with USB-C a USB-C interface. Full screen brightness is rated 250 nits, which again is identical to every other QD-OLED-based monitor we've seen. Hold that thought while we deal with the broader speeds and feeds.įor refresh, you get 240Hz and the response time is rated at 0.03ms, just like other QD-OLED monitors. But for image quality, this OLED take on the ultrawide thing totally blows those older G9 panels away. Features: QD-OLED panel, adaptive sync, 1x DisplayPort 1.4, 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x mini HMDI, USB hub, 1800R curveĬonsequently, this new OLED panel is exactly the same size and resolution as Samsung's previous Odyssey G9 monitors based on LCD rather than OLED panels.So, the form factor is familiar, albeit the 1800R curve is less extreme than the 1000R of previous G9 panels. ![]()
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