I always thought those poctures were that way because of the camera. Are you saying that is what you see in real life?. The chromatic abberation also has an effect that i do not like. Maybe it was just the greys all being slightly off that causes this.EverSurface wrote: ↑29 Jun 2025, 10:11dude.. u have no clue about monitors hardware unboxed has not realistic check motion blur.. OLED HAVE WHITE COLOR TRANSFER PROBLEM IS BLURRY MESS. I had qd oled 360hz.. and i sold, eyestrain fatigue everything colors are destroying my eye vision after 9 months.. i sold it. u can not play with HDR more than 40 minutes... flickering is even worse. OLED is good when u watch tv for gaming 0 good. That is why i have benq zowie it is so clear movement.. with motion blur on.. like i was on crt 120hz long time ago and eye strain 0 issue and fatigue.
There is a chance you and i are similar where only 1 to 2 ms of persistence / pixels of motion blur is comfortable to the eyes. Any more than that while still visible causes discomfort/strain. I think it would really help in your future postings if you can confirm this. Ie do you need the ufo to move at 180px/s while at 60fps non strobe in order to track it and feel your eyes are looking at a still pocture. For 3 pixels of persistence.
It is fortunate you had crts for a long time. Unlike me who has been a console gamer for 20 years. I have wasted away my eyesight.
I do think you can give woleds a try. Like another user pointed out. In the pictures they actually look the same or better than even proper low gtg lcds. Never the less they might also have the white balance off even when calibrated. Either too close to 6000k -7000k