ZMN wrote: ↑18 Mar 2022, 18:29
Would the response and processing benefits of this monitor also improve movies/video?
I'm looking for a screen about this size to watch podcasts on. These podcasts tend to be 1080p @ 30fps. Main thing I'm interested in is low ghosting and smooth motion, particularly if the video is presented at a higher frame rate. Is this a great monitor for podcast viewing or should I look elsewhere? Note, I don't want bigger nor do I want higher resolution for the content I'm interested in.
It's a good general purpose movie-watching and video-watching screen too.
For color and contrast, it is not wide-color-gamut like many LG NanoIPS or VA screens, which would be superior 24fps movie watching screens, but it is much better than most 24 inch monitors in movie motion. The XG2431 does smoothly support 24p (either natively or via multiples, 48Hz, 72Hz, 96Hz), and the fast pixel response time means you won't see the characteristic LCD smearing -- just ordinary persistence motion blur typical of sample and hold displays that is par for course for virtually all 24" flat panels ever greeting a desktop.
But, there's something that shines here: 60fps sports without motion blur
Since PureXP supports 60Hz (and nearby common 59.94Hz too). If you want less motion blur in video material, the XG2431 is almost the best 24" 60fps LCD "television" on the market you can watch sports action on unimpeded by display motion blur, due to PureXP GPU-independent single support for video, cable boxes, 60fps consoles, and 60fps material. It was a mandatory requirement that PureXP supports 60Hz.
For 60fps video material of ultra fast action, like sports POV camera (or racing / red bull air race / skydiving and wingsuiting / skiing / roller coaster / etc), it's kind of neat to enable PureXP and see CRT motion quality video on a ViewSonic XG2431. No other 24" monitor can pull this off reliably with video material. The ViewSonic XG2431 60Hz PureXP motion resolution handling beats all plasma televisions (even Pioneer Kuro) in motion handling, and all LG OLED TVs with BFI=ON. While not as bright or colorful, it is one of the only 24" panels to match and beat the motion resolution of a CRT tube for 60fps 60Hz material in a GPU-independent video-source-independent manner. Granted, there will be a fair bit of flicker, but you will have no noticeable 60fps video motion blur (excluding camera shutter motion blur) whenever PureXP is enabled.
For 24fps and 30fps you won't want to use strobing (although 72Hz single-strobe can look good if you like projector multi-strobe -- triple images for 24fps material may be preferable for some people, it has kind of a plasma motionfeel that way)
Be noted 60Hz PureXP is NOT recommended for stationary content like bright Windows 10 apps, 60Hz PureXP is intended when there is motion, and that the motion blur is the worse evil versus 60Hz style CRT flicker. Adjust brightness, viewing distance, and your content, and 60Hz turns from "painful flicker" to "more-comfortable-than-motionblur" when watching things like wingsuit BASE jumping or other fast action content. You can turn on/off PureXP as needed. Your mileage will vary depending on what video content you watch.
As our name sake is
Blur Busters, we're pretty proud of the blur busting feats. Be warned, 24fps and 30fps are somewhat beyond blur busting ability since it would require uncomfortable flicker or artificial fake interpolation to fix the persistence-based component of the motion blur or stutter-feel of 24fps... But no 24" display can anyway, and it won't add any ghosting-feel (of worse LCDs).