NVIDIA's First 65-Inch 4K HDR Gaming Display Arrives in February for $4,999

My friend paid $4000 for a 65 OLED about a year and a half or so ago. Sure the price is high, but that's always the case for cutting edge TVs.

I've been looking to get a larger TV and I don't think I'm interested in paying this much, but if they made a computer display version - 4K, HDR, GSYNC, 144Hz - at ~27-32" for around $2k I'd probably pay that.
 
I wish I could afford that beast of a display. Hopefully in 5 years it will be $500 when on discount, lol. One can have dreams, right? :p
 
4K for 5k? Not a good deal until you factor in nv shield. Good buy. In for three.
 
Gync, 144hz and hdr tax. :p
BFGD are also monitors, not televisions. You may as well be complaining about spending $500 on a 27" gaming monitor when you could get a 49" 4K TV for the same price.
 
BFGD are also monitors, not televisions. You may as well be complaining about spending $500 on a 27" gaming monitor when you could get a 49" 4K TV for the same price.


I'm not complaining because I've no intention of getting one. :)
 
Would buy one, but highly unlikely to find this thing at the BX, much less be able to ship this thing overseas through the APO system.
 
i want one when the price is a little lower, $3000 maybe ? i mean 65" at 144htz and gysnc, my living room tv is already 100" i want this for a desktop monitor
 
Overpriced and guaranteed to underperform compared to the latest Samsung sets (which support FreeSync!), and since Nvidia is now going to support the INDUSTRY STANDARD "VRR", there is literally not one reason to buy this monitor instead of a CHEAPER Samsung that offers a better picture!
 
My friend paid $4000 for a 65 OLED about a year and a half or so ago. Sure the price is high, but that's always the case for cutting edge TVs.

I've been looking to get a larger TV and I don't think I'm interested in paying this much, but if they made a computer display version - 4K, HDR, GSYNC, 144Hz - at ~27-32" for around $2k I'd probably pay that.

This already exists today. Both ASUS and ACER have models that are 4K, HDR, GSYNC, 144Hz, 27" and are under $2K (both are $1799 right now):

https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824236885&ignorebbr=1

https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824011229
 
The 2019 LG OLED TV’s will have native 120Hz (like previous years models) but with HDMI 2.1 now to support 120Hz input without motion interpolation. They will also support VRR. There are issues with using OLED for gaming/PC use but the image quality and response times are second to none, and they will cost about 1/2 this insane Nvidia screen. Hopefully market pressure will convince Nvidia is to support HMDI 2.1 VRR at some point in the future, or that AMD actually puts out true high end cards to make for good big screen gaming options.

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2019/01/lg-announces-its-2019-oled-tv-lineup-plus-an-8k-monstrosity/
And the cracks are opening already... Nvidia are now starting to support VRR (automatically for certified displays but can be manually enabled for other VRR screens).

https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2019...elect-freesync-monitors-as-g-sync-compatible/
 
This already exists today. Both ASUS and ACER have models that are 4K, HDR, GSYNC, 144Hz, 27" and are under $2K (both are $1799 right now):

https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824236885&ignorebbr=1

https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824011229
Yes, that's true. I had forgotten about those. They exist, but I (personally) don't really like that

1) Hitting 144Hz with them requires overclocking
2) The current display spec limits them to 26gbps which is not enough to do 144hz HDR with 4:4:4 chroma subsampling

I'll wait for revision 2.0, HDMI 2.1 should fix the bandwidth issues.
 
2019 Samsung QLED's are going to be 120hz native. Just get a new top end AMD system and live in large format nirvana on a 43" - 65" QLED @ 120hz with FreeSync 2.
 
Back
Top