Monday, April 15th 2024
Acer's 57-inch Predator Z57 Lands in Retail
For those unhappy with the resolution of most ultrawide displays on the market, Acer's new addition to its Predator line should please most of you, as it has a DUHD resolution which is better known as 7680 x 2160 pixels, aka dual 4K. The Predator Z57 also sports a 2304 zone MiniLED backlight which equals 1152 zones on a standard 4K display. Thanks to the MiniLED backlight, the Predator Z57 also gets a VESA DisplayHDR 1000 certification. However, the 120 Hz VA display panel might not be to everyone's liking, alongside the 1000R curvature.
Other features include support for AMD FreeSync Premium, 98 percent coverage of the DCI-P3 colour space, an HDMI 2.1 port, a USB Type-C port with 90 W USB-PD support, integrated KVM support, but seemingly no support for DP 2.1. The stand offers height, tilt and swivel adjustments and the display also sports a pair of built in 10 W speakers. Acer hasn't released the full specs of the display, but it retails for US$1,999.99 and can be ordered from Acer in the US now with Europe seemingly following shortly.
Source:
Acer US
Other features include support for AMD FreeSync Premium, 98 percent coverage of the DCI-P3 colour space, an HDMI 2.1 port, a USB Type-C port with 90 W USB-PD support, integrated KVM support, but seemingly no support for DP 2.1. The stand offers height, tilt and swivel adjustments and the display also sports a pair of built in 10 W speakers. Acer hasn't released the full specs of the display, but it retails for US$1,999.99 and can be ordered from Acer in the US now with Europe seemingly following shortly.
32 Comments on Acer's 57-inch Predator Z57 Lands in Retail
Wtf how is this comfy
Any better than a 1500R type curve?
Would just like to know for future reference as I've been really happy going 1500R from flat.
Cheers.
It's not a radius, it's flat at the edges, then transitions into a steep curve in the middle. That's going to screw with perspective, I reckon.
WTH, Acer?! That's even crazier than the $2000 price tag for a non-OLED.
Issues with games also go far beyond performance. If you like older games / watch a lot of 16:9 video, almost everything is going to be pillarboxed to an extreme. And for newer games, they'll both run like crap and suffer much more from the horribly "circles in the centre of the screen become streeetched elongated ovals with a pronounced zooming in/out effect at the edges" effect (barrel / pincushion distortion?) that gets amplified to the point of absurdity at 32:9 (example). You can try and turn the FOV (if the game allows it) down to reduce the effect but then stuff in the middle can then feel "too close" just like playing too low a FOV at 16:9. For many games, there is no "just right" FOV setting at 32:9 which doesn't feel weird / stretch the edges.
I have a 32" curved Sammy monitor atm that has a moderate curvature, and it works well for me, but I know I would NOT like the "flat on the ends but uber-curved in the middle" thing..just looks too goofy to me....
I would get that Dell monitor announced at CES if it didn't cost $2,400, just because it's a "professional" monitor.
If you just want a 16:10 display that's 57 inches wide, get a 65" 4K TV and run it at 3456*2160 with black bars down the side. They make curved TVs and if you're using it close to your face like a monitor you probably want all the curve you can get! :)
38/40-inch 21:9 true 4K mini-led, is it so hard?
Why give us this 57-inch, probably from left over panels.
That you don't like, fine, but you also don't have to buy it.
What you want is unlikely to happen as long as 40-inch is considered TV size.
That's not how it works.
If you mean that this is how the current sheets of glass are cut and this is one of the sizes that they can make, then sure, but they could also have made two 4K panels instead, so...
That VA though,…..
The only other requirement is the resolution, and we already saw from the leaked panel roadmaps that 21:9 ultrawides at 5K2K resolutions will be coming in volume in the late 2024-2025 time frame. Whether they will be mini-LED or OLED is yet to be known.
Dell have a display available now that checks most of the boxes in the UltraSharp U4025QW: 40-inches, 5K2K resolution, 120Hz, 5ms response. It's almost perfect, except for the $2,400 MSRP. (Edit: I've seen it selling for $1,799 which is still high, but definitely a better price).