Megalith
24-bit/48kHz
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
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- 13,000
Announced over a year ago, the first of NVIDIA’s Big Format Gaming Displays has finally debuted in the form of HP’s Omen X Emperium 65. While gaming on a large display is nothing new for the HTPC crowd and similar enthusiasts, this 65” 4K HDR monster offers the benefits of G-Sync and a 144Hz refresh rate, as well as built-in NVIDIA Shield functionality. It’ll be available in February for $4,999.
The panel itself is rated for up to 1,000 nits of peak luminance and 95 percent of the DCI-P3 color gamut. The gray-to-gray response time is rated for 4ms. The offside viewing angles, as you'd expect from any panel of this size, were great. It's a VA panel (technically, AMVA, for Advance VA) with an antiglare surfacing that worked well in the demo space we observed it in. USB ports on this side allow for charging and device connectivity. The manual controls for the onscreen display (OSD) menus comprise the directional joystick that you see here at the bottom, outlined in a red ring, along with a quartet of programmable OSD function buttons.
The panel itself is rated for up to 1,000 nits of peak luminance and 95 percent of the DCI-P3 color gamut. The gray-to-gray response time is rated for 4ms. The offside viewing angles, as you'd expect from any panel of this size, were great. It's a VA panel (technically, AMVA, for Advance VA) with an antiglare surfacing that worked well in the demo space we observed it in. USB ports on this side allow for charging and device connectivity. The manual controls for the onscreen display (OSD) menus comprise the directional joystick that you see here at the bottom, outlined in a red ring, along with a quartet of programmable OSD function buttons.