APC Australia

34GN850 monitor

LG’s new 160Hz, 1ms IPS ultrawide wonder.

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We know what you’re thinking: $1,600 for a 34-inch ultrawide 1440p monitor? Hold that thought for a moment while we consider what the LG UltraGear 34GN850 does give you. First up there’s 160Hz refresh. That’s enough for the vast majority of semi-pro esports aficionado­s. It ties in neatly with the claimed 1ms response of the LG’s Nano IPS panel. LG is one of the few monitor makers that actually produces LCD panels. In fact, it’s the world’s leader in IPS production, and thus has the pick of the latest and greatest of its own panels.

Long story short, LG reckons its new Nano IPS tech is comparable to TN panels for pixel response, while maintainin­g all the usual IPS advantages, such as superior colour accuracy and viewing angles. That’s critical, because there’s little point in driving a display at triple-digit refresh rates if the panel’s response rate can’t keep up.

To the high refresh rate and low response times you can also add comprehens­ive adaptive sync support. Both Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium are included. Note that the G-Sync support is G-Sync Compatible

Verified rather than full-fat G-Sync, so it lacks Nvidia’s processing chipset.

Which brings us, at last, to what the 34GN850 doesn’t give you – namely true HDR support. It does have VESA DisplayHDR­400 certificat­ion. But that’s the very lowest rung of HDR capability. DisplayHDR­400 only demands 400cd/m2 of brightness (a requiremen­t the 34GN850 meets but doesn’t exceed) and does not stipulate local dimming, with which LG has indeed not bothered. Pair that with an IPS panel rated at 1,000:1 for contrast, and you hardly have the makings of a bona fide HDR experience.

Contrary to the 1,000:1 contrast and mere DisplayHDR­400 ratings, this is actually a very punchy, vibrant display. It’s not perfect, of course. Notably, there’s a little glow around bright objects set in dark background­s. HDR content and games simply don’t have the eye-popping impact that a true HDR panel with local dimming and much higher brightness delivers.

Then there’s pixel response. Is it the fastest IPS panel we’ve seen? Almost certainly, yes. Can it match the best TN monitors for response? Just as surely, no.

But let’s be clear. This is a fabulous all-round gaming monitor. It’s quick enough for all but the most demanding esports players. If you have the graphics hardware to drive it properly, buttery smoothness awaits thanks to the 160Hz refresh. Moreover, the 34GN850 looks plain luscious in old-school adventure games like Witcher 3. And it’s big enough and detailed enough to do justice to the more cinematic elements of strategy titles, such as the Total War series.

All of which means our main reservatio­n involves pricing. This is a very sweet gaming monitor. But is it a $1,500 experience? Certainly, you can have 4K with high refresh for the same money, albeit in a smaller 27-inch form factor. Likewise, at this price point, DisplayHDR­600 with local dimming would seem like a reasonable minimum expectatio­n when it comes to HDR support. As it is, this is still a fantastic display. We’re just not sure it’s great value. JEREMY LAIRD

Great all-round gaming experience; very fast for an IPS monitor, though it’s not a true HDR experience.

 ??  ?? SPECS 34-inch; NanoIPS; 3,440 x 1,440; 400cd/m2 brightness; 1,000:1 contrast; 1ms response; 98% of DCI-P3; VESA DisplayHDR­400; DisplayPor­t, 2x HDMI, USB 3.1 hub; Nvidia G-Sync compatible, AMD FreeSync Premium.
SPECS 34-inch; NanoIPS; 3,440 x 1,440; 400cd/m2 brightness; 1,000:1 contrast; 1ms response; 98% of DCI-P3; VESA DisplayHDR­400; DisplayPor­t, 2x HDMI, USB 3.1 hub; Nvidia G-Sync compatible, AMD FreeSync Premium.

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