![]() Because it's absolutely farking fabulous. But you can still ink the new Alienware 34 AW3423DWF in as our new favourite gaming panel. Whatever, you get a three-year warranty with burn-in cover, so the simple answer is don't buy if you can't accept any burn-in after that time period, because you won't be covered.Īnd of course, this is still a very expensive monitor, even at the relative discount. I included the before image if you are interested. I started with a shot of the age gate video on the DIV site, tweaked it a bit and merged in some extra pieces around the door to make it more interesting. There's some early evidence that Samsung's QD-OLED tech may be slightly more susceptible to image retention than the LG alternative. By request, I created a desktop version of the mobile DIV wallpaper I uploaded a few days ago. Then there's the whole OLED burn-in thing. The triangular rather than vertically striped RGB subpixel substructure doesn't help with text clarity, either. That doesn't make for terribly crisp fonts in Windows or super sharp image detail. For general computing the pixel density ain't great. Current USB Type-C power delivery is limited to 100W, which isn't enough to keep a gaming laptop juiced.Īs for reservations, well, once again it's the same story as the OG Alienware OLED. It's also cheaper than the Philips Evnia and compared to that monitor is only missing a USB Type-C connection, which in a gaming context isn't a huge loss. ![]() Actual 4K 27- or 32-inch 4K OLED screens are likely to arrive within a year. ![]() ❌ You crave 4K: The ultrawide res is as good as it gets in proper PC monitor sizes, with 4K OLEDs only starting at TV panel sizes. ![]()
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