This monitor excels at responsiveness with a whopping 1 ms response time compared to that of the LG’s. Combined with AMD’s FreeSync technology, this monitor will pick up the pace on frames without any motion blur or ghosting. Samsung takes pride in this monitor’s ability to produce a wide color gamut of more than 1 billion colors, even though it doesn’t support HDR. This monitor promises razor-sharp images with a dedicated Game Mode that tweaks its color reproduction to the maximum. With this mode on, the darkness of the picture is improved to comply with shadows and shader details. The connectivity suite here houses dual HDMI slots and a single DisplayPort slot. If you want to push for 60 fps, use the DisplayPort because the HDMI slots will only give you 30 fps. Like our best overall, the connectivity setup lacks USB ports for external peripherals. However, this monitor has got a key feature for multitaskers. The PBP (Picture-by-Picture) feature lets you split the screen with 2 different video inputs. The trick here is that the split screens will still retain the quality of the original source. The absence of HDR support in our runner-up may be a dealbreaker for some. Still, it introduces an excellent color gamut. As for versatility, the monitor tilts vertically but doesn’t swivel horizontally.
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