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pcmonitors.info said:Despite the backlight being ‘ZeroFlicker’ in its normal mode the monitor is fully compatible with Nvidia 3D Vision 2 which needs to ‘flicker’ (or strobe’ to work. LightBoost is a native feature required for Nvidia 3D Vision 2 certification so this should also be supported – good news for gamers who have discovered the blur reduction benefits of this in 2D as well.
Order one and try it out. Granted, I'm coming from SUPER LAGGY MOTION BLUR MINSTERS from 06, but the difference is mind blowing. It makes me a WAY better player. BF4 is a much better game on this panel. The black equalizer, as one Newegger puts it, "Makes enemies glow in the dark."
I'm not even using lightboost. ^_^
I'm thinking about upgrading (or downgrading?) my 1440p 27" IPS Auria EQ276W monitor to this for the 144Hz and lightboost since I play FPS games mostly and still reminisce of my CRT days with CS and Quake 3.
But... I'm hesitant because:
1. I know I'll lose image quality and desktop space.
2. The screen will be 3 inches smaller
3. I keep seeing people online saying if you aren't getting at least 120 FPS it's not worth it. Is this true? I have GTX 680s in SLI and if I play BF4 when my FPS drops to like 80 or something what happens? Lightboost doesn't work? Also on that note-- I see a lot of people saying your framerate gets cut in half with Vsync if it drops below 120, but doesn't triple buffering take care of that?
I see these great reviews raving about the lightboost monitors but I'm so used to the 1440p IPS and I don't know what to do.
Hmm lightboost is > than black equalizer in most cases, i wish you could have both.