LG expands G-Sync Compatibility to its 2020 OLED products across 12 models - CES 2020

Great ... for the very few...

From 42" ...

And how many gamers use 42"++ displays?

How many uses 27"'ish?

Please please please make decent OLED displays in 'regular' desktop sizes : 27"-32"

Please
 
From 42" ...

And how many gamers use 42"++ displays?

How many uses 27"'ish?

Please please please make decent OLED displays in 'regular' desktop sizes : 27"-32"

Please

These are TVs, not monitors.
 
The real title should say something like," LG makes VRR monitors using industry standards." Not Gsync compatible.

Nvidia failed with their marketing for gsync only monitors. Please don't let them rebrand an industry standard as "gsync"
 
The real title should say something like," LG makes VRR monitors using industry standards." Not Gsync compatible.

Nvidia failed with their marketing for gsync only monitors. Please don't let them rebrand an industry standard as "gsync"

This makes no sense.

Title is correct.

Gsync is not an industry standard.

It is now Gsync compatible.

This isn't a monitor

and they aren't rebranding the industry standard. The TVs are already VRR capable and now certified for Gsync.
 
This makes no sense.

Title is correct.

Gsync is not an industry standard.

It is now Gsync compatible.

This isn't a monitor

and they aren't rebranding the industry standard. The TVs are already VRR capable and now certified for Gsync.

And this was confusing to read :huh:^_^...
 
The real title should say something like," LG makes VRR monitors using industry standards." Not Gsync compatible.

Nvidia failed with their marketing for gsync only monitors. Please don't let them rebrand an industry standard as "gsync"


If you were to plug one of these into an AMD GPU you would not have the option of being able to enabled Freesync, LG have partnered with Nvidia to enable VRR so of course they are going to call it "G-Sync Compatible", Also they aren't monitors, They are TV's.


Samsung AFAIK have plans of having VRR available for both AMD, Intel and Nvidia GPU's.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top