- Edited
brjdenis i have same feeling when i see stripe lines like here:
when i put it on monitor its ultra hard to see it, extreme pain, vision problems, multiplies of stripe lines etc etc
brjdenis i have same feeling when i see stripe lines like here:
when i put it on monitor its ultra hard to see it, extreme pain, vision problems, multiplies of stripe lines etc etc
and movement of images also causes me wanna vomit or something. no mprt mode is turned on or anything. with mprt i feel like im close to epilepsy attack
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9010255/
interesting article
but how to check how is my monitor polarised? any ideas?
maybe thats why i feel on all ips huge eye pain? i noticed on my old omen 25i i had huge problem with dlp rainbow effect that was on font and it cause my eyes hurt. but with this asus i have problem on whole screen. visible pixels make me pain.
Almost all modern LCD monitors are RGB subpixel layout, whether it is TN/VA/IPS, it's the same
There are a few which are BGR, but this is not the case here.
AOC Q24G2A/BK was better because smaller screen and higher ppi but i also had pain and feel that monitor is not natural vision for me.
Ofc it is not "natural vision", it depends what you're doing with it. (gaming / reading web / scrolling viciously)
To be able to get anywhere near "natural vision", you need a +1000Hz (properly compliant) and +200ppi display
The next closest thing is 360hz panels such as the XL2566K, WOLED or >=240hz 1440p or >=360hz 1080p LCD (no Mini LED) laptop panels (and hope they aren't KSF phosphor, as this is completely untouched by reviewers)
You could definitely have pixel inversion artifacts, as it's a potential panel defect but I think you just dislike the new backlight's employed and you dislike low refresh rate (really common issue people have)
You are likely suffering from the wider color gamut of KSF phosphor (QDEF/Quantum Dot would probably be an issue for you too, as seen below)
but how to check how is my monitor polarised? any ideas?
Just get a pair of polarised sunglasses and turn them around till they go black. Research into that.
qb74 thanks for amazing answer, can you recommend me monitor 27 inches 1440p 165 hz+ that wont cause me huge eye pains?
technicalitch hey you should look into irlens syndrome from what I'm reading of how your sensitive to lines/patterns and seeing flashes and circles.. their glasses can stop all of that for you. Especially the nausea and other symptoms from patterns/lines too. They can help you find the right colors to mix into lenses that calms the brain and stop that processing issue.
jordan iread about this and this theory is imho too far because i never expected any problems before these ips monitors i bought
technicalitch I mean I never had issues either till 2020 and they definitely help. Many people wear irlens due to that issue specifically, there's a whole irlens syndrome institute which they have brain scans of before and after wearing them with how they calm the brain. Just tossing it out there because I think it could help, it's no quackery I can assure you lol
Edit: doesn't fix my screen issue but stops patterns making me feel off
technicalitch
This is extremely hard for me to do, as I've myself have had issues in finding a 1440p 240hz panel w/o one of these KSF/NanoIPS & QDEF backlight panels.
UPDATE: here's a few other models I've compiled
A few options to consider (all +200hz):
1.) Omen X 27
2.) AOC AG273QZ
3.) Y27GQ-25
4.) Odyssey G6 / old Odyssey G7 (1440p 27" 240hz VA curved)
5.) Lenovo Y27gq-20 (27" 165hz)
Other than these 3, 99% of 1440p +200hz LCD monitors are with KSF backlight or QDEF backlight (or maybe there's other ones but they aren't reviewed / unknown to me at least, but I sincerely doubt it)
6.) WOLED, divided into 2 categories:
6.1) 1440p240hz ones (PG27AQDM, XG27AQDMG [glossy], LG 27GR95QE, XG272-2K-OLED, AG276QZD, 27QHD240, X27U)
6.2) 4k240hz / 1080p480hz one (LG 32GS95UE, ViewSonic's XG323-4K-OLED2)
Perhaps venturing into 1440p 240hz laptop panels (16" or 18") is a better option? I have not researched into them but they seem promising.
But, anything wide color gamut should be KSF phosphor or QDEF nowadays.
Maybe you are someone who's only sensitive to KSF/NanoIPS and not QDEF panels, such as:
source: https://blurbusters.com/beautiful-red-phosphor-in-new-1ms-ips-1440p-lcds-interferes-with-blur-reduction-badly/ (comment section)
There's also BOE panels, which are KSF phosphor but not NanoIPS (g24f, m32q, 28" 4k panels etc.) and older Sharp panels.
You can also have monitor models share a panel but have a custom backlight.
It's sadly trial & error...and a lot of review researching.
Source for panel models (can order by res & refresh rate): https://tftcentral.co.uk/monitor_panel_parts
Good XB273U GX review (shows SPD properly)
async what is that website you posted screenshot from
Decided to order it to see. Rather expensive. I'll post once I test drive it.