Monday, December 12th 2022

Dough Announces New Crowd-Developed Spectrum OLED Monitor Featuring 27-inch 240Hz QHD Panel from LG Display

Today, DOUGH—the world's first community powered gaming hardware creator—announced the Spectrum ES07E2D, a new 27-inch QHD OLED panel gaming monitor coming in 2023. This groundbreaking display builds on the foundations laid by Dough's crowd-developed Spectrum lineup and is the first OLED monitor truly built for top-tier gaming, leveraging a gaming-grade 240 Hz OLED panel developed by LG Display. Consumers interested in purchasing the new Dough Spectrum ES07E2D can sign up today to enter a special reduced-price pre-order window on Dough's website.

Dough attended the 59th International Display Week Symposium, Seminar & Exhibition in May 2022, where it shared its take on major display trends and polled the community to find out which of the upcoming displays they found most exciting. A 27-inch QHD OLED panel from LG Display raised the most interest and discussion. Based on these survey results, Dough picked this panel as a starting point for its latest monitor project, thus giving life to the Dough Spectrum ES07E2D. With an adaptive refresh rate up to 240 Hz, and individually lit pixels, the Dough Spectrum ES07E2D features smooth animations without distracting tears or stutters along with a response time of less than one millisecond. OLED is already one of the fastest technologies on the market, and Dough focused on reducing display lag as much as possible to provide the best competitive gaming experience to users.
No blooming, deep blacks, and an infinite contrast ratio are core to OLED technology; Dough's glossy coating takes it to the next level. Some manufacturers lock their OLED panels behind matte polarizers to reduce reflections, but the Dough community made it clear that reducing reflections is not worth the drop in black levels, sharp detail, and vibrant colours. More and more new monitors arrive on the market only in ultrawide or curved variants, but the Dough community made it clear that they largely prefer flat monitors in a 16:9 aspect ratio. Not only do these monitors take up less desk-space, but they also have broader support in games.

Additionally, many of Dough's Community members use multiple devices with their monitors. HDMI 2.1 ensures that they can use new features such as variable refresh rate on the latest consoles, while the Type-C port connects users' monitors and peripherals to their laptops with a single cable that also allows for charging. For those hoping to maximise their cable management, Dough's built-in USB hub, KVM switch, 100 W USB-C charger, and dedicated audio amp get more done with fewer cables. Similar to the rest of the Spectrum line-up, the new Dough Spectrum ES07E2D monitor will ship with three years of limited warranty, which includes coverage in case of burn-in for the first two years.

Pricing and availability
The Spectrum OLED QHD 240 Hz (ES07E2D) is currently listed on Dough's website where prospective customers can subscribe to receive an exclusive pre-order invitation at a special reduced price. Early bird pre-orders start at $649 / 749€ and will gradually increase to the full MSRP of $1,099 / 1,199€ by release, which is planned for July 2023.
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32 Comments on Dough Announces New Crowd-Developed Spectrum OLED Monitor Featuring 27-inch 240Hz QHD Panel from LG Display

#26
gmirabal
ChomiqAnd was never delivered to people that paid for it 2+ years ago.

Enjoy the nightmare stories:
www.reddit.com/r/evev/

TFTcentral went as far as to post a disclaimer about the Eve V/Dough in the news piece.
I myself made the mistake of pre-ordering the 1440p monitor from them and never getting a refund. Unfortunately there's also a lot more than just the reddit forums. There are articles from other sites such as the Verge that also talk about Eve Devices/Dough Tech incompetence. I mean even on their own discussion forums they have frustrated users. There are some links that I can send if anyone is interested in researching them too. At this point, I just advise any consumers to avoid purchasing from them or at least research what they might be getting themselves into.
Posted on Reply
#27
Vayra86
UpgrayeddThese will sell. Glossy and no stand was a great decision. Pre order price is $350 cheaper than the matte coated LG version. Excellent if it all works as intended.
They probably will at pre order price, and then what? They've placed a product on the market they can't really compete with.

Company goes under poof warranty. And do consider the possibility this crowd funded thing is not as experienced as LG in all the technology around the panel.
gmirabalI myself made the mistake of pre-ordering the 1440p monitor from them and never getting a refund. Unfortunately there's also a lot more than just the reddit forums. There are articles from other sites such as the Verge that also talk about Eve Devices/Dough Tech incompetence. I mean even on their own discussion forums they have frustrated users. There are some links that I can send if anyone is interested in researching them too. At this point, I just advise any consumers to avoid purchasing from them or at least research what they might be getting themselves into.
LOL. Well, that's gut feeling for ya. I had no idea.
Posted on Reply
#28
gmirabal
Vayra86They probably will at pre order price, and then what? They've placed a product on the market they can't really compete with.

Company goes under poof warranty. And do consider the possibility this crowd funded thing is not as experienced as LG in all the technology around the panel.


LOL. Well, that's gut feeling for ya. I had no idea.
Literally :laugh: I wasn't aware how corrupted they were until I actually cancelled my order in April. I questioned why it would take them more than 30 days to issue a refund while it only took them a day to take the money.
Posted on Reply
#29
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
ChomiqAnd was never delivered to people that paid for it 2+ years ago.

Enjoy the nightmare stories:
www.reddit.com/r/evev/

TFTcentral went as far as to post a disclaimer about the Eve V/Dough in the news piece.
Yeah, I'm not going to defend the company for its well-documented shitty business practices, but I did try out the QHD 280Hz and it is really good for what its worth (better than the AW2723DF). Sadly, no other companies are integrating integer scaling which is why I am still interested in their products.
Posted on Reply
#30
R-T-B
CheeseballYeah, I'm not going to defend the company for its well-documented shitty business practices, but I did try out the QHD 280Hz and it is really good for what its worth (better than the AW2723DF). Sadly, no other companies are integrating integer scaling which is why I am still interested in their products.
Isn't integer scaling in like all modern gpu drivers too though?
Posted on Reply
#31
Cheeseball
Not a Potato
R-T-BIsn't integer scaling in like all modern gpu drivers too though?
It is in general, but they all have their own limitations, so technically it is better to have the display handle the scaling than the source device. For example, if the source is device is an old school console (if you're using a plain HDMI converter) or a device that doesn't support/limits changing the resolution, the display can correct that and double (or triple, etc.) the pixels perfectly.
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