I can't stand 1080p even on smaller 22 or 24" monitors because I see the grainy images - the individual pixels are too large.
The difference between 3840x2160 with 8.2 MPixels and 2560x1600 with 4.1 MPixels is noticeable.
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What is 4K PRO-UHD and why does it have lower resolution than standard 4K UHD? | BenQ US
... way to take a quote out of context, and then read it as saying something it explicitly does not? I mean, I get that reading comprehension is difficult, but let's see:
- I never said higher resolutions don't look better (often by quite a lot!)
- I specifically said in the following sentence that
in motion, it isn't
very noticeably low resolution
- I never said this applied to every person on earth (myself included!)
I did say, and I quote: that it looks "fine". Not good. Not great. But not crap either - unless you either have
very good eyesight or are spoiled by higher resolutions - like I am. Heck, personally I would never go below 1440p for my main monitor - but that's not mainly due to gaming, but rather because of the other uses the monitor has. I sort of agree with you about 1080p - my secondary 24" 1080p monitor could definitely stand to have some higher pixel density for what I use it for. But that isn't gaming, and motion resolution is
very different from static pixel resolution on LCDs, and is just as dependent on response times as it is on pixel count. It's pretty easy to find a 1080p panel with better motion resolution than a 2160p one.
Does a good 1440p or 2160p monitor look better than a good 1080p one, each running at native resolution? Yes, all else being equal. But for most people, other factors start getting into the equation at that point - which I also covered above - factors of cost, access, processing power, etc. The 1080p monitor you can afford looks better than the 2160p one you can't afford; 1080p high or equivalent at 60+ fps looks quite a lot better than 2160p at low-to-medium 30fps, etc. And, crucially, you can get a
good 1080p monitor in the ~$300 range. For gaming, that is. You won't find even a passable 2160p gaming monitor below $700 - below that they're all 60Hz office monitors with slow response times. Which, again, will likely have significantly worse motion resolution than that $300 1080p gaming monitor.
Also, it's downright hilarious to see someone use one of those terrible "this is what resolution looks like" comparison marketing photos in a discussion. Like ... do you honestly think that is representative? Or that it somehow tells me something I'm not familiar with? Heck, they don't even illustrate resolution well in the first place! (And the photoshop work is really lazy!)