Re: Acer 390Hz monitor - XV252QF
Posted: 07 Oct 2021, 12:05
Who you gonna call? The Blur Busters! For Everything Better Than 60Hz™
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Yes, definitely. I have noticed my jumps from 144 Hz to 240 Hz to 390 Hz very easily. For me, the major selling point of this monitor is the insanely low overall latency it has. Everything feels instant, even coming from my 240 Hz TN monitor.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 08:28Thanks a lot! Is the jump from 165hz to 360hz significant? I was considering the Zowie xl2546k but TN has always been bad outside of competitive gaming
I’m glad youre satisfied with your purchase. Would you say with all the features this monitor has including blacklight strobing, 390hz and low latency, it gives you a considerable advantage over the opponents, making getting the kills a lot easier?lizardpeter wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 15:56Yes, definitely. I have noticed my jumps from 144 Hz to 240 Hz to 390 Hz very easily. For me, the major selling point of this monitor is the insanely low overall latency it has. Everything feels instant, even coming from my 240 Hz TN monitor.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 08:28Thanks a lot! Is the jump from 165hz to 360hz significant? I was considering the Zowie xl2546k but TN has always been bad outside of competitive gaming
Coming from 240 Hz TN and playing a lot of games that cannot reach 390 Hz (only really Rocket League and CS GO get that high on my PC), I wouldn't say it gives an insane advantage, but I definitely think there is an advantage there that is worth it to me. I don't use the backlight strobing. However, the lower latency is very noticeable for me. I have only had it for a week, but in games like Modern Warfare 2019 and Battlefront 2, it feels as though I can instantly switch between targets and everything feels like it's connected right to my hand. I think I will need more time to adjust to the lower latency and to really get all of the benefits from this. Keep in mind, I was already using the Viper 8K, have an overclocked system, have all power saving features disabled, have fast RAM, have a ton of Windows tweaks applied, lock my CPU and GPU to max power states at all times, have all background services and performance lowering patches disabled, etc. So my system already had very low latency, which I think made it easier for me to notice when another X amount of milliseconds were removed just from this monitor alone. I would say that more than anything, a monitor like this raises the floor on your performance and slightly increases the ceiling. Everything does feel easier and more intuitive.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 17:00I’m glad youre satisfied with your purchase. Would you say with all the features this monitor has including blacklight strobing, 390hz and low latency, it gives you a considerable advantage over the opponents, making getting the kills a lot easier?
Btw mine is coming October 14th which is after my birthday ( was November 8th before) so I hope it’ll be worth the wait!!!
Same setup with locked overclocks and power savings disabled. I can get some 140 shots with an average of ~150. Never saw anyone doing 120 before.lizardpeter wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 20:35Coming from 240 Hz TN and playing a lot of games that cannot reach 390 Hz (only really Rocket League and CS GO get that high on my PC), I wouldn't say it gives an insane advantage, but I definitely think there is an advantage there that is worth it to me. I don't use the backlight strobing. However, the lower latency is very noticeable for me. I have only had it for a week, but in games like Modern Warfare 2019 and Battlefront 2, it feels as though I can instantly switch between targets and everything feels like it's connected right to my hand. I think I will need more time to adjust to the lower latency and to really get all of the benefits from this. Keep in mind, I was already using the Viper 8K, have an overclocked system, have all power saving features disabled, have fast RAM, have a ton of Windows tweaks applied, lock my CPU and GPU to max power states at all times, have all background services and performance lowering patches disabled, etc. So my system already had very low latency, which I think made it easier for me to notice when another X amount of milliseconds were removed just from this monitor alone. I would say that more than anything, a monitor like this raises the floor on your performance and slightly increases the ceiling. Everything does feel easier and more intuitive.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 17:00I’m glad youre satisfied with your purchase. Would you say with all the features this monitor has including blacklight strobing, 390hz and low latency, it gives you a considerable advantage over the opponents, making getting the kills a lot easier?
Btw mine is coming October 14th which is after my birthday ( was November 8th before) so I hope it’ll be worth the wait!!!
I should also mention that I'm not a noob, so people who are less in tune with their hardware and latency might not get as much benefit out of it as I have gotten. I used to play Fortnite on a pretty competitive level back when the game was good (earlier seasons). I'm also very highly ranked in all Call of Duty games (BO4, MW 2019, BOCW) with KD in the top 0.1% to 0.2% on the most recent title. I'm also one of the top players on Battlefront 2's Hero Showdown. I seem to get about the same reaction times on this monitor as my 240 Hz TN monitor, but maybe on average it is lower by a few milliseconds. I can easily and repeatedly get reaction times in the 120 ms range on Human Benchmark, a testing website, and that is with Windows DWM crap in the way too.
Holy!!! Any links to a tutorial showing how to disable all the unnecessary stuff to maximize latency? And that’s some crazy numbers youre putting uplizardpeter wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 20:35Coming from 240 Hz TN and playing a lot of games that cannot reach 390 Hz (only really Rocket League and CS GO get that high on my PC), I wouldn't say it gives an insane advantage, but I definitely think there is an advantage there that is worth it to me. I don't use the backlight strobing. However, the lower latency is very noticeable for me. I have only had it for a week, but in games like Modern Warfare 2019 and Battlefront 2, it feels as though I can instantly switch between targets and everything feels like it's connected right to my hand. I think I will need more time to adjust to the lower latency and to really get all of the benefits from this. Keep in mind, I was already using the Viper 8K, have an overclocked system, have all power saving features disabled, have fast RAM, have a ton of Windows tweaks applied, lock my CPU and GPU to max power states at all times, have all background services and performance lowering patches disabled, etc. So my system already had very low latency, which I think made it easier for me to notice when another X amount of milliseconds were removed just from this monitor alone. I would say that more than anything, a monitor like this raises the floor on your performance and slightly increases the ceiling. Everything does feel easier and more intuitive.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 17:00I’m glad youre satisfied with your purchase. Would you say with all the features this monitor has including blacklight strobing, 390hz and low latency, it gives you a considerable advantage over the opponents, making getting the kills a lot easier?
Btw mine is coming October 14th which is after my birthday ( was November 8th before) so I hope it’ll be worth the wait!!!
I should also mention that I'm not a noob, so people who are less in tune with their hardware and latency might not get as much benefit out of it as I have gotten. I used to play Fortnite on a pretty competitive level back when the game was good (earlier seasons). I'm also very highly ranked in all Call of Duty games (BO4, MW 2019, BOCW) with KD in the top 0.1% to 0.2% on the most recent title. I'm also one of the top players on Battlefront 2's Hero Showdown. I seem to get about the same reaction times on this monitor as my 240 Hz TN monitor, but maybe on average it is lower by a few milliseconds. I can easily and repeatedly get reaction times in the 120 ms range on Human Benchmark, a testing website, and that is with Windows DWM crap in the way too.
It's more like in the 120-130 range. It really depends on how much sleep I get and how I am feeling on that particular day. 127-128 is a really common number for me. Surprisingly, I was getting lower times with my Viper Mini than my Viper 8K, even though the Viper 8K is technically faster. I think it is because the Viper Mini's clicks were less stiff, shaving off a few milliseconds by requiring less force. I would also recommend trying out a program posted on this forum. It's like Human Benchmark but not browser based and can go full screen, bypassing DWM.
I don't have any links to anything in specific at the moment. I might make a separate post of all of my tweaks if people are interested since it is kind of off topic for this post (even though this monitor is part of the puzzle). I will just list some of the main things. I cannot promise they will all make a difference. However, in combination I am absolutely sure that they lower overall system latency.Salemthecaz wrote: ↑07 Oct 2021, 22:49Holy!!! Any links to a tutorial showing how to disable all the unnecessary stuff to maximize latency? And that’s some crazy numbers youre putting up