teG wrote: ↑04 Mar 2023, 01:44
It happens in all games that have the slightest stalls or starts to flicker subtly at jsut over 50fps with G-sync on.
Both models you listed are indeed native G-SYNC (contain modules).
To be clear, native G-SYNC can still flicker, regardless of panel type, but it typically only occurs at very low framerates (<40) before LFC kicks in. This form of flicker is not physically avoidable at low native refresh rates, which is, in part, why some models, especially those with higher physical refresh rates (240Hz+), start LFC earlier. For instance, instead of starting LFC below 36 FPS, it may start it at, say, 60 FPS.
If you and I are talking about the same subtle pulsating brightness flicker at lower framerates, it's possible both models you tried happen to be starting LFC too low, and thus don't avoid this form of flicker within a certain framerate range.
If my description of flicker does not match what you are experiencing, please try to expound on it further.
As for the Omen X25 itself, a quick Google search returns a couple of similar results for "omen x25 flicker." Also make sure you aren't conflating flicker with inversion artifacts:
viewtopic.php?t=6805
teG wrote: ↑04 Mar 2023, 01:44
I think I will have to try the monitor on another computer but that would just be a pain as I don't have a second computer. I am wondering if itis worth trying it on the games console as that can be paired with g-sync.
If the flicker happens in a certain framerate range, the only way another computer would help, is if it was able to exceed that range and sustain a higher framerate with better frametime performance in the same games.
As for testing on a console, again, if the flicker is framerate-related, that wouldn't change anything either.