For brightness, BenQ has made DyAc+ exceed 300 nits on their 25 inch panels. Few monitors can strobe as bright as the XL2546's.bakamukako wrote: ↑02 Aug 2021, 21:49I recently became a newbee to this whole motion blur reduction thing after realizing that motion blur is the thing that's been bothering me the most ever since I switched from CRT to LCD. I'm currently using a LG 144hz monitor that has a strobe mode. Problem is that I prefer very bright screens due to some eye conditions I have, and this monitor's strobe mode is just really dim to me. So I'm currently looking for the brightest monitor that has good strobe quality, and I always hear people talking about Zowie's DyAc monitors being really bright. How would you compare XG2431's strobe brightness to those DyAc monitors?
The XG2431 can exceed 200 nits at the "Light" setting at 240 Hz, but will have much more crosstalk.
However, if you tolerate dimness better, and do all tuning tricks documented in the Blur Busters Strobe Utility, the center become extremely clear. IPS pixel response is tight at 240 Hz but it does get fairly competitive to an average TN panel. The XL2546 is a well known benchmark in TN strobe quality. So, at least you've been informed, that if you want the brightest, your options suddenly get limited and you will have to live with compromises (like XL2546 behaving like a CRT only between 100Hz-240Hz, it can't strobe below 100 Hz) -- the XL2546 does not have retro-friendly strobing. But it is BRIGHT for a strobing mode (brighter than a desktop CRT).