Tuesday, June 25th 2024

Philips Launches the Evnia 32M2N8800 4K 240 Hz QD-OLED Gaming Monitor

Philips, or rather its brand licence partner MMD—which is a division of TPV—has launched a new gaming monitor under its Evnia brand, namely the 32M2N8800. The model name doesn't really give away much about the specs, but what we're looking at is a 31.5-inch 4K QD-OLED display with a 240 Hz refresh rate. The panel is VESA DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400 certified and ClearMR 13000. Like most displays of this type it has a 10-bit panel with a 0.03 ms grey to grey response time and 99 percent DCI-P3 colour gamut coverage. The Evnia display also features a range of gaming mode features like a smart crosshair and various game mode settings. There's also support for picture by picture and picture in picture.

Connectivity wise, it's sadly stuck with DisplayPort 1.4, as well as a pair of HDMI 2.1 ports. There's also a built-in USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) hub with two USB Type-A ports, of which one supports the older USB battery charging 1.2 standard, which delivers 5 V at up to 1.5 A. There's also a 3.5 mm audio output jack and the display is also equipped with Philips' Ambiglow LED backlight on four sides. The stand supports height, swivel and tilt adjustments. The Evnia 32M2N8800 is expected to retail for around US$1000, based on pricing in Hong Kong.
Source: Philips
Add your own comment

33 Comments on Philips Launches the Evnia 32M2N8800 4K 240 Hz QD-OLED Gaming Monitor

#26
wNotyarD
Caring1"Server not found" when I try that link.
Weird, just tested it again on my cell phone and it worked just fine:
Posted on Reply
#27
Andyr
Why cripple it with ports that top out at 144Hz without compression? DSC is fine for gaming, but anyone who thinks it's visually lossless for anything else needs their eyes testing...
Posted on Reply
#28
Chomiq
AndyrWhy cripple it with ports that top out at 144Hz without compression? DSC is fine for gaming, but anyone who thinks it's visually lossless for anything else needs their eyes testing...
I guess VESA needs to have their eyes checked:
Posted on Reply
#29
HOkay
AndyrWhy cripple it with ports that top out at 144Hz without compression? DSC is fine for gaming, but anyone who thinks it's visually lossless for anything else needs their eyes testing...
Which GPUs have you seen DSC in action on? I ask because my friend had the same view & I couldn't understand why, until I saw it in action on his 1080ti! There were definitely problems with that implementation! Or are you maybe confusing chroma subsampling with DSC? Chroma sampling you can definitely see the difference in text clarity on the desktop!
Posted on Reply
#30
Andyr
HOkayWhich GPUs have you seen DSC in action on? I ask because my friend had the same view & I couldn't understand why, until I saw it in action on his 1080ti! There were definitely problems with that implementation! Or are you maybe confusing chroma subsampling with DSC? Chroma sampling you can definitely see the difference in text clarity on the desktop!
4070 ti on a GP27U. For photo editing, there was a noticeable difference between DP1.4 with DSC and HDMI2.1 without DSC.
Posted on Reply
#31
Marsil
P4-630That's not the issue, it just takes a lot of desk space underneath the monitor with that V, I need to use that space.
Consider buying a monitor arm
Posted on Reply
#32
Bagerklestyne
Andyr4070 ti on a GP27U. For photo editing, there was a noticeable difference between DP1.4 with DSC and HDMI2.1 without DSC.
You can't do 240hz @ 4k without DSC on anything less than DP2.1 UHBR20 and presently there are 3 cards on the market and 1 monitor that does it (from this current crop of 240hz/4k oleds)
Posted on Reply
#33
Waweq
ChomiqClearly the same:


Samsung Display that manufactures the QD-OLED panels is a separate company from Samsung Electronics. There's no rebranding going on.
Hey i have this monitor actually Aorus FO32U2 :D
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Jul 1st, 2024 16:21 EDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts