PC Pro

LG UltraWide 38WN95C

The star screen this month, with a gorgeous IPS panel backed with all the features most people need

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SCORE

PRICE £1,108 (£1,329 inc VAT) from laptopsdir­ect.co.uk

While most curved panels use VA technology, LG opts for IPS with this 37.5in display. On the surface, this sounds identical to the panel inside the Asus Designo Curve MX38VC, but some digging in diagnostic utilities revealed that the LG’s panel was manufactur­ed earlier this year while the Asus uses one created in late 2018. As a result, it benefits from a number of upgrades.

Top of the list is a 144Hz refresh rate, which will naturally make a big difference in games compared to the Asus’ peak of 60Hz – if you have a graphics card powerful enough to feed 3,840 x 1,600 pixels. Add a 1ms response time, and adaptive sync support for both AMD and Nvidia graphics cards, card and you have a supe superb gaming display.

Our tests also show this panel can hit 543cd/m2 in general use, notably above LG’s stated peak of 450cd/m2, which explains why it passed VESA’s tough certificat­ion process to earn a DisplayHDR 600 rating. This is immediatel­y noticeable if you activate the screen’s HDR Effect mode, which revealed details that are lost on other monitors.

This panel also offers a much wider colour gamut than the Asus, and LG makes the most of it by including both sRGB and DCI-P3 presets. Testing at 120cd/m2, the sRGB mode covered 97.8% of the sRGB volume with 102.7% volume, while at peak brightness in the DCI-P3 preset it covered 94.2% of the DCI-P3 gamut with 97.9% volume. Truly excellent figures, especially when backed with an average Delta E of 0.91. Aside from the very top left, it proved to be a uniformly bright panel too.

One advantage of IPS curved panels over their VA rivals is viewing angles, with less obvious drop-off as you look across the screen. The disadvanta­ge is the amount of curvature. While LG doesn’t state an official figure, we believe this is a 2300R panel (like the Asus) and that means it’s a far gentler curve. As a result, you don’t get the same level of immersion; indeed, when you’re sitting in front of the LG you barely notice any curve at all.

What hat you do notice is the astonishin­g amount mount of desktop space available. You can easily view three windows side by side, and we recommend Microsoft Power Toys’ FancyZones to o help keep them organised anised as LG doesn’t ’t supply a screen-management utility. A pixel density of 111ppi ensures that text looks sharp from normal viewing distances too; there’s no grain here.

We’re pleased to see that LG supplies a more flexible stand than Asus, and coupled with a lighter weight this is a surprising­ly easy monitor to move around. It’s as compact as it can realistica­lly be, so you can push it back quite far on your desk, and note that it offers height adjustment of 110mm along with 30° of swivel.

LG keeps things neat at the rear, with the standard two HDMI inputs, DisplayPor­t and a Thunderbol­t USB-C port that can supply a reassuring

94W of power to your laptop. There are also two USB ports, again at the rear, but with no USB-B input you

“What you do notice is the astonishin­g amount of desktop space available: you can easily view three windows side by side”

can’t use these with connection­s other than USB-C (and consequent­ly you can’t share a keyboard and mouse between two systems hooked up to the screen). LG doesn’t supply a ports cover, instead relying on its supplied white cables to blend in – which is useful if you were thinking of placing this monitor front of house. That all-white theme extends to the external power supply too.

There’s no need for separate speakers as the pair of 5W units here do an excellent job with music and films alike, but that’s it for “extras”. That’s fine by us: LG has ploughed its money into the panel and the electronic­s that power it – with tangible results. We’re even fans of the OSD, which is so quick and easy to understand that you’ll be navigating through its options in no time at all (once you find it, as the mini joystick control is tucked beneath the LG logo).

While the LG UltraWide 38WN95C costs substantia­lly more than the Asus, and more still than the 43in Dell, it’s worth the added investment. If you buy the LG UltraWide 38WN95C then your eyes will thank you for many years to come – and its width should bring productivi­ty benefits too.

 ??  ?? ABOVE The UltraWide was ultra-spectacula­r in our suite of technical tests
ABOVE The UltraWide was ultra-spectacula­r in our suite of technical tests
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 ??  ?? BELOW A compact design makes it easy to find the perfect position on your desk
BELOW A compact design makes it easy to find the perfect position on your desk

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