ASUS teases their 1440p ROG Swift ENDGAME 240Hz OLED gaming monitor

well there are burn in prevention features to stop it, but if you are dumb enough to turn that off, you are asking for trouble.

Most first gen LG OLED tvs don't have this and knowing 2 people owning 3 of these TV's used constantly I have yet to notice any burn in.

People really drive home this issue when it's not that common especially seeing as most phones use OLED and have high brightness displays, rarely ever here anything about burn in there as well.

Not saying it's impossible but it's definitely unlikely
 
Most first gen LG OLED tvs don't have this and knowing 2 people owning 3 of these TV's used constantly I have yet to notice any burn in.

People really drive home this issue when it's not that common especially seeing as most phones use OLED and have high brightness displays, rarely ever here anything about burn in there as well.

Not saying it's impossible but it's definitely unlikely

The only evidence of burn in I have is the OLED on my glacial MOBO. Due to the static repeating images of my hardware monitor, I can see alot of burn in when its showing the glacial gif. The temp values are burned in.

But I have no clue what kind of OLED gen they used. Probably the cheapest available.
 
The only evidence of burn in I have is the OLED on my glacial MOBO. Due to the static repeating images of my hardware monitor, I can see alot of burn in when its showing the glacial gif. The temp values are burned in.

But I have no clue what kind of OLED gen they used. Probably the cheapest available.

I would have to agree to that explanation. In addition the evidence for that would be the fact that it's not that bright of a display, so to have burn in at such a low power requirement is quite shocking
 
There's a man on YouTube who has had his OLED Switch turned on and on 1 image for the last 18 months and only now is he getting feint signs of burn in but that is on 24/7 for 18 months with a static image.
 
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