Monday, December 6th 2021

AOC Launches 43-inch 4K 144 Hz HDR 1000 Gaming Display

The large screen gaming market has grown by yet another model in the shape of the AOC G4309VX/D, which is built around a 43-inch VA panel with a resolution of 3840 x 2160. The display is rated at HDR 1000, although the peak SDR brightness lands at 720 cd/m², which is still very bright considering the size of the display.

The refresh rate tops out at 144 Hz and the response time is said to be 1 ms, via the DP 1.4 port using DSC or the two HDMI 2.1 ports. There's support for adaptive sync and motion blur reduction, which should make this a good choice for both PC and console gaming. The G4309VX/D also features four USB 3.0 ports, or USB 3.2 gen 1 if you prefer. It should be noted that there appears to be two different versions of this display, with the G4309VX currently selling for around US$1,300 in Taiwan, but it lacks HDMI 2.1, although the rest of the spec appears to be near identical. No word on pricing for the G4309VX/D as yet, but we'd expect it to end up in a similar price bracket.
Sources: AOC China, via TFT Central
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31 Comments on AOC Launches 43-inch 4K 144 Hz HDR 1000 Gaming Display

#26
R0H1T
R-T-BEven uninformed users will start to notice VA/IPS bleedthrough when approaching 1000 nits, I assure you.
For sure, this is like that MPixel race on (phone) cameras. I always tun on "night light" even on phones these days & just hate stupid levels of brightness.
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#27
R-T-B
R0H1TFor sure, this is like that MPixel race on (phone) cameras. I always tun on "night light" even on phones these days & just hate stupid levels of brightness.
It won't be an issue on per pixel lighting like OLED's, and it is nice to have those bright highlights. I speak from experience (even though my OLED maxes out at "only" 600 nits).
Posted on Reply
#28
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
AsRockLast i heard it did not work to well, never looked in to on the nVidia side so i said AMD as i know it works.

2 colors switched but you know this already ?, my LG panel is the same.
No, whatever that is, is new to me



I used to run a 40" 1080p samsung as my main screen for a long, long time (TV had a really good game mode) before moving to 1440p 32"

I can totally see myself moving to a 42-43" 4K high refresh rate single monitor setup in the coming years, as my second screen is pretty much a netflix monitor anyway
Posted on Reply
#29
phanbuey
This seems like the same VA panel that the Aorus FV43 uses. If so, it's not great. I sent mine back. Could barely display the color red properly from one end of the screen to another.

I would be playing something like heroes of the storm, on the left side of the screen the red would be almost purple, and on the right it would be like a red/orange. Also VA pixel layout makes even 4k look more pixelated than IPS/OLED.
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#30
R-T-B
MusselsNo, whatever that is, is new to me



I used to run a 40" 1080p samsung as my main screen for a long, long time (TV had a really good game mode) before moving to 1440p 32"

I can totally see myself moving to a 42-43" 4K high refresh rate single monitor setup in the coming years, as my second screen is pretty much a netflix monitor anyway
It's how the subpixels are arranged. Normal displays are red-green-blue. BGR is inverted. It can mess with text smoothing and subpixel based AA schemes.
Posted on Reply
#31
BArms
R-T-BIt's how the subpixels are arranged. Normal displays are red-green-blue. BGR is inverted. It can mess with text smoothing and subpixel based AA schemes.
I had an AOC VA 32" a cpl years ago that looked awful, worse than my older TN panel Asus, so I sent it back. I got a Samsung Odysee 32" (gen1) and it was much better, I've long wondered why that AOC looked so awful and maybe that's why.
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