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Posted 20 hours ago

Dell S2522HG 24.5 inch Full HD (1920x1080) Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, IPS, 1ms, AMD FreeSync Premium, NVIDIA G-SYNC Compatible, DisplayPort, 2x HDMI, 5x USB, 3 Year Warranty

£9.9£99Clearance
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About this deal

At its discounted price, the Dell S2522HG is the best budget 240Hz gaming monitor for competitive players. Specifications Screen Size The monitor uses the same IPS panel found in the other 24.5″ 1080p 240Hz displays. So, you get flawless 178° wide viewing angles, ensuring that the picture remains perfect regardless of the angle you’re looking at the screen. I'd say that you get better results with 240hz strobing than with 390hz strobing if your fps is lower than 300. One feature the Dell S2522HG is missing in comparison to its alternatives is Motion Blur Reduction technology. To learn more about monitors and ensure you’re getting the model most suited for your personal preference, visit our comprehensive and always up-to-date best gaming monitor buyer’s guide. Conclusion

In addition, for optimal performance, MBR needs to run at a lower than maximum refresh rate, which results in a bit higher input lag. To take advantage of 240Hz, you’ll need to be able to maintain a high enough frame rate – ideally 240FPS, but anything north of 144FPS is good. We feel that you should be able to maintain at least ~180FPS to feel a boost from 144Hz/FPS.

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If you’re also using your monitor for work or other types of games as well, then a 1440p 144Hz display is worth considering too. Just found another interesting thing, if you connect to the S2522HG via HDMI then 1080p120hz shows up under the “TV resolutions” instead of “PC.” I’ll give that a deeper test in a few hours. I’ve tried doing pursuit photography manually with the UFO test a few times (including in the past) but wasn’t able to get good results. I only have an older smartphone camera with no shutter speed adjustments (I think it’s fixed at 1/15s). Not sure if you have any tips on that, as I could supply pictures otherwise. However, even if you can only get around 144FPS at the moment, you should take future-proofing into account. A good monitor should last you at least one or two (or more) CPU/GPU upgrades and since a 240Hz monitor is nowadays not that much more expensive than a 144Hz model, it’s worth the investment for competitive gaming. The 60hz gamma/picture issue was a false alarm. I looked into it further and it appears that “Output Dynamic Range” was being set to limited with “use default color settings” even though everything was greyed out and it showed “full.” This was with a displayport connection. Not sure if this a quirk on the Nvidia GPU side or the monitor side. Changing to “use nvidia color settings” and manually setting out dynamic range to Full made 60hz match 120hz+.

In terms of contrast specifically there seems be a pretty hefty differences between it and the other 24.5inch 1080p 240hz monitors and specifically the Alienware AW2521HF to simply just be panel to panel variance? Especially the concern is the rather low contrast measurement specifically, at a level that’s already put me off from the LG Nano IPS 1440p panels. Moving on, the Dell S2522HG has a rapid 1ms GtG (gray to gray pixel transition) response time speed with three overdrive modes: Fast, Super Fast and Extreme. While the difference between 240Hz and 144Hz is not as noticeable as it is between 60Hz and 144Hz, it’s definitely there, and if you want the smoothest gaming experience with minimal input lag, it’s worth the extra cost.In other words, MBR is not for everyone and a lot of casual players wouldn’t be able to tell the difference or would consider it too minor to care. There’s no way of telling whether it’s something you would like to use without actually trying it first though. Another thing related to this is that the S2522HG only has >60hz options listed under “PC” in the Nvidia display panel. While under the “Ultra HD, HD, SD” section it only has 60hz 1080p as the highest. My understanding this can be problematic in terms of PS5 support for 120hz? The Benq EX2510 by comparison, a known PS5 supporting display, only has 1080p 144hz under the PC section. 1080p120hz is a choice in the Ultra HD, HD, SD section, along with options such as 4k 60hz suggesting the monitor is capable of taking a 4k signal and down scaling (2560×1600/1440, 1920×1200, 1920×1440, 2048×1536).

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