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Budget 34 inch ultrawide Monitor- India Only Region

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Aug 12, 2013
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System Name Nebula
Processor Ryzen 9 7900 @5.4 GHZ
Motherboard Gigabyte B650 GAMING X AX
Cooling Custom Loop - Bykski 60mm x360 mm RAD + Byskski 45x360 mm RAD+ Barrow 30x360mm RAD + D5 Pump+Res
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Video Card(s) Asus Strix OC 3080 12G on Phanteks Glacier Chrome Waterblock
Storage Adata XPG S40G 1TB, Crucial MX500 1TB, WD SN 570 1TB , Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Display(s) Acer XV272U 2560x1440 @144Hz
Case PC O11 Dynamic White, with Custom Front Fan Mod Total 13 Fans
Power Supply Phanteks Revolt Pro 850W
Mouse Cooler Master MM720
Software Win 11 Pro
Benchmark Scores R23 Multi: 30K CPUZ Multi: 12450
Out for hunting new 34 inch ultrawide Monitor, decent one.
  1. Budget is 28-33k INR
  2. I need it for gaming and coding with mutple sm's and vm's
  3. DP1.4 is preffered for better color bandwidth support.
  4. I have good sun light in the room, so brightness is priority
  5. 3440x1440 and 2560x1440 both will work
Few Options i discovered:
MSI OPTIX
ASUS TUF
LG Ultra GEAR

Any good suggestions are heartedly welcome
 
Budget is 28-33k INR
FYI, that is (today) ~ $326 to $384 USD.

I see all three of those are curved screen monitors. Are you sure you want a curved screen? I note some users love them but many users soon discovered their disadvantages and wished they went for a traditional flat display.

The biggest problem with curved is there really is only one "sweet spot" to put your head while viewing. And this is X number of inches away from the center of the screen that equals the distance to either side.

If you move your chair a few inches either way left or right, the viewing angles to either side changes. If you back your chair up a foot or two, the viewing angles of the sides change. Move in too close, same thing.

So to keep those angles optimized all the time, the user must always sit and hold their head the same distance from the center of the screen.

And for sure, if a second person needs to see the screen at the same time, one or both will not see an ideal image.

Again, many people are not bothered by this, others are. I would say if you know someone who has, or had a curved screen monitor, ask their opinion based on how they like to sit at their computers.

I know for me, I would rather have multiple monitors instead of 1 large curved screen, but that's me. Everyone is different.

Of the 3 monitors you listed, I would say any would meet your needs. I suggest you Google the model number and add the word "review" in the search to read what others (preferably the professional review sites) say.

As for brightness, IMO you should control the amount of light coming in the room instead. Use curtains, shades and/or blinds. It is my experience the bigger problem is NOT the brightness, but the glare on the display from the windows.

Very bright displays can be stressful (eventually damaging) to the eyes, and perhaps unenjoyable when viewing at night.
 
FYI, that is (today) ~ $326 to $384 USD.

I see all three of those are curved screen monitors. Are you sure you want a curved screen? I note some users love them but many users soon discovered their disadvantages and wished they went for a traditional flat display.

The biggest problem with curved is there really is only one "sweet spot" to put your head while viewing. And this is X number of inches away from the center of the screen that equals the distance to either side.

If you move your chair a few inches either way left or right, the viewing angles to either side changes. If you back your chair up a foot or two, the viewing angles of the sides change. Move in too close, same thing.

So to keep those angles optimized all the time, the user must always sit and hold their head the same distance from the center of the screen.

And for sure, if a second person needs to see the screen at the same time, one or both will not see an ideal image.

Again, many people are not bothered by this, others are. I would say if you know someone who has, or had a curved screen monitor, ask their opinion based on how they like to sit at their computers.

I know for me, I would rather have multiple monitors instead of 1 large curved screen, but that's me. Everyone is different.

Of the 3 monitors you listed, I would say any would meet your needs. I suggest you Google the model number and add the word "review" in the search to read what others (preferably the professional review sites) say.

As for brightness, IMO you should control the amount of light coming in the room instead. Use curtains, shades and/or blinds. It is my experience the bigger problem is NOT the brightness, but the glare on the display from the windows.

Very bright displays can be stressful (eventually damaging) to the eyes, and perhaps unenjoyable when viewing at night.
I actually meant by brightness is clarity and inherent sharpness of monitor,
As i have Acer xv272u i 27 inches, i suffer bad clarity / gamma and bad sharpness on 90% of games,
For example I tried Stellar Blade 1st time and my friend was sitting beside me, my friend ask me why you want to change your monitor, just by experience with that monitor i said, le me just rotate the view, and u will see faced mushed, and i said this just by my past experience, and when I turned the view to screen showing character face, it was actually mushed/bad aliasing,
 
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