Hey there,
im slightly going crazy here. I was visiting a friends place and he was emulating old games on his cheap home office monitor. Instantly i noticed that there is something different there. The scrolling is way smoother and less blurry on this cheap 80 euro 60hz ips monitor than on my 1000 euro oled c2 120hz tv.
That made me curious and i wanted to see if other 60hz content behaves the same. And it does. A first person shooter locked to 60fps (hz) looks smoother on that cheap ips panel than on the expensive OLED tv. There is way less blur on that ips panel. The only way to make the OLED look smoother is activating BFI.
Is there something wrong with my TV? I cant believe the experience of 60hz content is better on that cheap monitor. I have both displays running right now at the same time and that cheap 80 dollar office monitor has way better motion clarity. Sonic the Hedgehog is a great example. OLED is blurry during fast movement while the other monitor looks a bit better during that same movement.
Im kinda getting the feeling to only use the OLED for 120hz content only and everything that is locked 60 or even 30 to use a cheap monitor like that.
Is there something wrong with my OLED or is that standard behavior for low hz content?
Thanks for your help!
Motion Clarity on cheap Monitor better than on OLED (60hz)
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chado935271
- Posts: 1
- Joined: 24 Dec 2025, 11:49
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Supermodel_Evelynn
- Posts: 281
- Joined: 21 Aug 2022, 14:28
Re: Motion Clarity on cheap Monitor better than on OLED (60hz)
Motion clarity is shit on any monitor without backlight strobing.
It only starts getting better if your monitor can do native 500 HZ and you can achieve 500 FPS at that, 1000 HZ at 1000 FPS is ideal.
Anything below 1000 HZ at 1000 FPS is easily beaten by a 20th century CRT TV running at 60 HZ and 60 FPS.
Nothing can beat an electron gun.
It only starts getting better if your monitor can do native 500 HZ and you can achieve 500 FPS at that, 1000 HZ at 1000 FPS is ideal.
Anything below 1000 HZ at 1000 FPS is easily beaten by a 20th century CRT TV running at 60 HZ and 60 FPS.
Nothing can beat an electron gun.
