Wednesday, June 26th 2024

Philips Announces the Evnia 34M2C6500 QD OLED Gaming Monitor with WQHD Resolution

Prepare for a stand-out gaming experience with the finest picture quality. On June 26th, 2024 the new Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 will be available for purchase and, not to mention, with powerful visual specs along with it. The large, 34-inch (86.36 cm) screen with a 1800R curvature of the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 monitor pairs well with its WQHD (3440 x 1440) resolution and QD OLED panels for a realistic and visually accurate picture experience.

Visually Oriented Gaming at Your Fingertips
The pinnacle experience of the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 is playing visually oriented games, and it will accentuate color where it counts: The Smart Crosshair feature will automatically calibrate the color of the crosshair to be opposite of the game's background so gamers can better their aim. Not to mention, the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500's immersive curved frame would be incomplete without its QD OLED Panel, which is designed to provide incredible brightness and infinite contrast in DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400 quality.
Packing many other features that make its picture experience stand out, the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 monitor is certified with VESA ClearMR 9000: one of the higher tiers of anti-blur guarantee available. This monitor also displays smoother visuals with its true 10-bit display for an all-around color-focused monitor that is made to game.

Game with Speed and Precision
Adding on to the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500's feature arsenal, one of the best customizable aspects is the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500's Ambiglow lighting. Not only can the lights change colors, but they can also follow audio and video content while you game; thereby making a completely personalized and fashionable gaming experience.

In addition to its Ambiglow lighting, the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 is equipped with a 175 Hz refresh rate that ensures high performance and seamless gaming.

Additional Features for the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500
The Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 has some other features up its sleeve. Its ergonomic Height Adjustable Stand (HAS) allows gamers to fix their monitor to the most comfortable position. Last but not least, this monitor has a SmartImage game mode specifically optimized to enhance every gamer's experience.

Pricing and Availability for the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500
All in all, the Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 is an ideal option for gamers who have an eye for incredible visuals and crave an immersive, yet personalized gaming experience.

The Philips Evnia 34M2C6500 monitor will be available for purchase in June and at an MSRP of €869,00
Source: Philips Evnia
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20 Comments on Philips Announces the Evnia 34M2C6500 QD OLED Gaming Monitor with WQHD Resolution

#1
Darthgrey
Hope at least 1 company will make 32 inch OLED with 2560x1440, I personally don't want to buy 4K, but I want OLED 16:9.
Posted on Reply
#3
Onyx Turbine
Kind of a strong price without a light and brightness sensor..
Or am I old fashioned as such i need this for gaming and separate for office tasks?
Posted on Reply
#4
Onasi
@ArcanisGK507
16:10 is dead in mainstream PC monitors. That’s just how it is.
2560x1440p is regular 16:9 though, that’s probably the most quickly developing segment of the market, so there you’d have plenty of choice.
Posted on Reply
#5
Chrispy_
DarthgreyHope at least 1 company will make 32 inch OLED with 2560x1440, I personally don't want to buy 4K, but I want OLED 16:9.
That's my preferred size/resolution for gaming too - but I'm not sure OLED works at that pixel density when used as a desktop monitor.

It woks for VA or IPS displays because the subpixels are a neat 1/3rd of a pixel in a predictable vertical bar. OLEDs are anything but.
Posted on Reply
#6
Nater
DarthgreyHope at least 1 company will make 32 inch OLED with 2560x1440, I personally don't want to buy 4K, but I want OLED 16:9.
Once you go Ultra-Wide you'll never go back - but you can. 3440x1440. I think there's some 40" ultrawides out there, just set your res to 2560x1440. Black bars on each side.
Posted on Reply
#7
Chry
ArcanisGK507i like 16:10 or 16:11 monitor ... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Display_resolution_standards#2560_×_1600_(WQXGA)

2560X1600
or even
2560 × 1440 (QHD)
3200 × 1800 (QHD+)
are nice...
I get it, I do too. But 16:10 is not that important for monitors of this size, since its only so much verticality you need. 16:9 is okay at this size.
16:9 for laptops however, is plain stupid. It's the norm when it should be an exception.
Posted on Reply
#8
Minus Infinity
DarthgreyHope at least 1 company will make 32 inch OLED with 2560x1440, I personally don't want to buy 4K, but I want OLED 16:9.
I personally don't want QHD and don't want OLED and don't want 16:9

33" 3840 x 2400 16:10, miniled with 2304 zones, Vesa 600 Trublack, 144Hz, 100% AdobeRGB, DCI-P3, 85% Rec 2020, 140W PD, 2x usb-c 3.2, 2x usb-A, DP2.1, FreeSync.
Posted on Reply
#9
Caring1
The back of it looks like an incomplete and poorly drawn render.
Posted on Reply
#10
JustBenching
NaterOnce you go Ultra-Wide you'll never go back - but you can. 3440x1440. I think there's some 40" ultrawides out there, just set your res to 2560x1440. Black bars on each side.
I had a super ultra wide 32:9 and I did go back.
Posted on Reply
#11
Gigaherz
At this low resolution it would only be interesting at 399.
Posted on Reply
#13
Chomiq
SN2716057How on earth do you mount the vesa? I don't see the necessary holes.


Oh look, it has built in PSU and not a dedicated power brick.
Posted on Reply
#14
SN2716057
Chomiq

Oh look, it has built in PSU and not a dedicated power brick.
Yes, I saw that too but. It might have an adapter?

No 100x100 holes anywhere..
Posted on Reply
#15
Chomiq
SN2716057Yes, I saw that too but. It might have an adapter?

No 100x100 holes anywhere..
Yeah, most likely some sort of adapter. Unless that rear panel has some sort of removable plastic elements.
Posted on Reply
#16
TheLostSwede
News Editor
SN2716057How on earth do you mount the vesa? I don't see the necessary holes.

PS: I'll bet this has been asked multiple times but why is the link "View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source" exactly the same on the forum, @TheLostSwede?
Talk to the bossman, I have no control over how that works I'm afraid.
Caring1The back of it looks like an incomplete and poorly drawn render.
It's their design, on most, if not all of the Evnia monitors. It's gamur, or something.
Posted on Reply
#17
b1k3rdude
Blah, blah, all I want to know is what Sub-Pixel layout it has, so I know if its going to be as rubbish as every other OLED for text clarity....
Posted on Reply
#18
Onasi
b1k3rdudeBlah, blah, all I want to know is what Sub-Pixel layout it has, so I know if its going to be as rubbish as every other OLED for text clarity....
It’s the first gen QD OLED panel, so still the old layout… better than WOLED, not as good as second gen QD OLED.
Posted on Reply
#19
Nater
fevgatosI had a super ultra wide 32:9 and I did go back.
21:9 is where it's at. Closer to 2.35:1 film aspect ratio. Those super ultra-wides are only good for sim games and productivity IMO.
Posted on Reply
#20
b1k3rdude
Onasibetter than WOLED, not as good as second gen QD OLED.
Some W-OLED have stripe layout, so comprable to LCD strip-sub-pixel layout. And regarding 2nd gen QD-OLED, which monitor have this, as I dont beleive they are much better in the text clarity dept.
Posted on Reply
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