Wednesday, February 8th 2023

INNOCN 27-inch 2K QHD 144Hz Gaming Monitor 27G1R is an Elite Smart Display for Gamers

Shenzhen Century Joint Innovation Technology Company Ltd. (INNOCN) has been a driving force in the competitive market for smart displays for the last decade, producing some of the most elite smart monitors and computers. INNOCN, or Innovation China, is an award-winning manufacturer that has made a name for itself by developing smart displays with more unique features than competitors.

The INNOCN 27 Inch 2K QHD 144 Hz Gaming Monitor 27G1R, one of the company's most recent innovations, is a unique smart display with features that gamers, graphic designers, and other creatives will love. Due to its frameless and ultra-thin design, it can easily be placed anywhere in a home or work office. It includes a metal stand and is VESA wall mountable.
This gaming monitor is available for purchase directly from Amazon. Until February 12, 2023, Amazon Prime members can receive a $50 discount on the Gaming Monitor 27G1R, bringing the price down to just $179.99 from its regular $229.99 price.

People who use smart displays skillfully, such as avid gamers, photographers, and videographers, may want the highest quality smart displays available. This new gaming smart monitor has a 2560x1440 resolution and a VA screen for incredible image quality.

For those who value clear picture quality, the Gaming Monitor 27G1R has a refresh rate of 144 Hz. This means that images are refreshed 144 times per second, resulting in a more fluid viewing experience.

This monitor is top tier when it comes to getting the fastest response time possible for less choppy gameplay. It has a 1 ms response time, which is the amount of time it takes to change the color of the pixels on the screen. The faster the response time, the better the image and color quality.

The 27G1R Gaming Monitor has an LED atmosphere light that is more natural for eye sight while watching TV to protect users' eyes and provide a life-like experience like never before.
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6 Comments on INNOCN 27-inch 2K QHD 144Hz Gaming Monitor 27G1R is an Elite Smart Display for Gamers

#1
las
Elite? 1440p VA 144 Hz? Sounds like 2010 tech, bet it has tons of va smearing

Elite for me; 1440p 240 Hz minimum, preferable IPS tech or OLED, but that is limited...
Posted on Reply
#2
Fierce Guppy
lasElite? 1440p VA 144 Hz? Sounds like 2010 tech, bet it has tons of va smearing

Elite for me; 1440p 240 Hz minimum, preferable IPS tech or OLED, but that is limited...
To be precise, late 2014 tech. The Asus ROG Swift PG278Q is the very first 1440p 144Hz monitor, with 1 DisplayPort...
Posted on Reply
#3
Argyr
lasElite? 1440p VA 144 Hz? Sounds like 2010 tech, bet it has tons of va smearing

Elite for me; 1440p 240 Hz minimum, preferable IPS tech or OLED, but that is limited...
VA smearing is aoverblown, and most of the recent monitors fixed the issue. half of the people don't even notice it.

Unlike horrible IPS glow.
Sounds like 2010 tech
Yep. That's IPS
IPS tech or OLED
lol. As if they were on par. IPS with 800 contrast ratio is truly almost OLED-tier...
Posted on Reply
#4
toooooot
I checked some of their monitors recently. Having all desired features for gamers and probably the lowest prices, they are very attractive.
But since i had bad luck with small brands, I would probably choose a well known brand costing more.
Posted on Reply
#5
trsttte
ArgyrIPS glow
IPS glow is much more overblown, unless you use the monitor in pitch black darkness you can't see it.
Posted on Reply
#6
las
ArgyrVA smearing is aoverblown, and most of the recent monitors fixed the issue. half of the people don't even notice it.

Unlike horrible IPS glow.



Yep. That's IPS



lol. As if they were on par. IPS with 800 contrast ratio is truly almost OLED-tier...
VA is slow, even Samsung VA panels marketed for gaming are horrible IMO. Tried most of them. Especially in the first 15-30 mins where panel is cold. Too much smearing. Especially light to dark and dark to light transitions are veeeery slow (ie. being flashed in a shooter). This is the reason why NO pro gamers use VA panels. They all use TN or fast IPS panels.

IPS is by far the better tech for most gamers and for all-round usage.
IPS offers way more speed and less ghosting / smearing. IPS have way better viewing angles and excels for color-critical work, where VA fails. High contrast does not mean precision, in this case. OLED has very high contrast _and_ good color precision.

VA has tons of issues in general; black crush, horrible viewing angles (meaning color shift even when you move your head in front of the screen, which is why most VA panels are curved, which sucks for 16:9 panels) - THIS is why Samsung curves all their VA panels for 16:9 "gaming monitors" - A curve is horrible for 16:9 use, it makes some sense at 21:9 but not 16:9

Yeah IPS have IPS glow, but VA have VA glow instead, haha .. Simply google it.

VA are also much more prone to backlight bleed because backlight sucks and black is more black. VA have terrible uniformity in most cases, especially when you move your head slightly. Gamma shift all over.

VA is a cheap panel for a reason. IPS is superior by far. VA might have better contrast but it's horrible for precision which is why professionals use IPS for graphical usecases where colors matter. High contrast does not mean good color precision.

If you want higher contrast on IPS, simply buy IPS black panels, which rivals VA panels while retaining color precision and speed. 1:2000 contrast which is identical to fast VA panels (these drops in contrast levels) .. If you want better colors, buy nano IPS / IPS with quantom dots aka fast ips, which is 1:1000 on average.

VA will never be a high-end panel, has too many flaws, it replaced TN as the cheap offering in many stores. IPS is the higher end choice.
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Dec 22nd, 2024 09:45 EST change timezone

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