Again, the Xeneon absolutely isn't unique in that regard, so it's not a fault of Corsair itself. Full-screen or nearly full-screen brightness is a weakness with all LG-enabled OLED gaming monitors thus far. But it is still an issue, especially for such an expensive monitor.Elsewhere, however, it's mostly very good news. In darker scenes punctuated by smaller bright objects, this monitor really delivers.
You can see that playing shooters. There's just no unintentional blurring. Add in the 240Hz refresh, and you have both no blurWhat it's less convincing at is serving up a really exceptional visual spectacle. Partly that's down to size. OK, at around $1,000 this monitor is priced very much on par with similar OLED options, but it's still an absolute hill of money for a 27-inch 1440p gaming monitor.
That makes for a tricky comparison compared to, say, a 34-inch ultrawide monitor. You can actually have one of those with a Samsung QD-OLED panel for barely any more money. Sure, the$1,000 also buys you all manner of fully 4K LCD gaming panels, some with Mini LED backlights and local dimming. The HDR experience and pixel speed won't compete with the Corsair, but the image detail from 4K is on another level.Granted, this monitor's 1440p native resolution helps keep the frame rates up.
There's a lot to like about this monitor, then. The pixel speed and latency are just fabulous. In certain scenarios, the HDR experience is fantastic, too. The build quality and features are super, too.
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