• Reviews around sync (4.58 of 5)

    Acer Nitro XV272U Pbmiiprzx 27" WQHD (2560 x 1440) IPS G-SYNC Compatible Monitor, 144Hz, 1ms VRB, VESA Certified DisplayHDR400, DCI-P3, Delta E<2

    • This distinction means that the bare bones G-sync function works, and just barely works in my experience
    • I am still trying to figure out the color space possibilities, response times, adaptive sync, etc., etc
    • Updating to the newest NVIDIA drivers will make the monitor G-SYNC compatible
    • Backlight bleed.- HDR is useless.- 144Hz without chroma subsampling requires two cables and disables adaptive sync
    • Pros:+ 144Hz refresh rate.+ Adaptive sync from 40 to 144Hz.+
    • This is my first G-Sync compatible monitor and I have it set at 120Hz and my FPS performance has actually improved greatly
    • Backlight bleed.- HDR is useless.- 144Hz without chroma subsampling requires two cables and disables adaptive sync
    • The point is you are at the mercy of game developers and the monitor's own ability to run adaptive sync + HDR
    • This is a high quality monitor, 4K, 120hz, and G-Sync compatible, G-sync works flawlessly in my experience
    • This is a high quality monitor, 4K, 120hz, and G-Sync compatible, G-sync works flawlessly in my experience
    • But the beautiful thing about a G-Sync monitor like this one is that even if you can't maintain 120fps, things still look good bouncing around between 60 and 120, thanks to the variable refresh rate support
    • I'm also glad to have an adaptive sync monitor, rather than a G-Sync one, so that I will be able to get the adaptive support with the PS5 when it comes out
    • Despite nVidia certifying this monitor as G-sync compatible
    • Can’t use free sync