When are OLED monitors going to be worth getting? I keep hearing "next year bro" and every year they get a little cheaper and they tack on some bullshit feature, but burn in still hasn't been solved.
>>105879093 (OP)OLED burn in can't be solved, it's physically impossible.
If you can afford an OLED you can afford to replace it after several years of use. Burn in is real, but how severe it is in modern monitors is highly overstated compared to older ones (despite what the memes in /g/ will tell you). Just don't be a retard using it and you will be fine. Most phones are OLED and are static as shit yet burn in is not a concern. Just grab one or be happy with good mid range LCD with properly dialed in colour settings, you are going to overlook clarity anyway after 4 hours of use.
Or you can get a CRT and deal with low definition, heavy power draw, low desk space and a ticking time bomb of scalper pricing and unsupported hardware. Take it from someone who fell for it with a 20 inch pvm: it's not worth the hassle compared to modern monitors.
Burn in in OLED is an eventual thing, it's just a matter of how long it will take and your general usage
If you can't afford OLED, don't. Simple as. You'll be replacing that monitor faster than an LCD, that is a fact. But you're getting something that's patently better in terms of image quality, no contest. It's choosing between durability and quality. What newer OLED monitors are getting is increased full screen brightness or less aggressive ABL which is something of a problem on these. You can't have the entire screen blasting 1000 nits (and it would kill your eyes and burn in much faster anyways). The goal right now seems to be to get increased brightness overall so that HDR is more worth using. For instance right now "True Black" modes are set to 500 instead of 400 nits. True Black 400 is nothing impressive for HDR and the 1000 nits modes will dim the screen severely in bright scenes, it's only designed for dark content with highlights such as horror games.
dont run your oled screen at 100% and burn in will never be a problem
it also refreshs constantly or whatever so images dont appear static on them
>>105879215>If you can afford an OLED you can afford to replace it after several years of useyeah, I'm thinking of waiting for the Gigabyte MO27Q28G since it's apparently only gonna be around £400-500. I just want to watch kino and play horror games with pure blacks.
Some OLEDs also come with 3-4 year warranties that include burn it damage, so that's something to consider.
>>105879328>1000 nits kills your eyesbetter not look out a window on a sunny day LOL
>>105879328Is VRR flickering a meme?
The more i read about new monitors the less i know what to pick.
>>105880583It's not, but the idea is to be playing games at framerates that aren't wildly fluctuating. You'll notice it more with games that go fucking crazy on loading screens.