Acer Nitro XV272U Vbmiiprx 27 Zero-Frame WQHD 2560 x 1440 Gaming Monitor | AMD FreeSync Premium | Agile-Splendor IPS | Overclock to 170Hz | Up to 0.5ms | 95% DCI-P3 | 1 x Display Port & 2 x HDMI 2.0
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Jarvis Simmons
> 24 hourTLDR: Ive only had it for 14hrs at the time of this review Doesnt come with a DP cable only HDMI. Color is Hazy but the quality and pixel performance is great The whites dont pop out as much so its harder to see dark spots than a non-budget 1440p or 1080p Its still really good and games look great (I play League of Legends, CoD Modern Warfare, Overwatch, Valorant, Risk of Rain 2) The stand is great. You can tip it up and down, lift it pretty high and make it entirely vertical (no tools needed). This monitor is perfect for a budget 1440p 144hz monitor. Its about $100 cheaper than buying a high quality monitor. The only thing that differs from a hq monitor and this one is the color is a hazy. The dark spots dont pop out as much as they do on my 144hz 1080p monitor because the white isnt completely white its literally hazel colored (like Rihannas skin). Like when you put your phone in night mode to eliminate the blue light to protect your eyes. You can change the settings on the back of your monitor to make it look better but at the end of the day it still doesnt look bad. In the long run itll protect your eyes and its definitely an upgrade from my 1080p monitor. The stand is great too. You can tip it up and down, lift it pretty high and make it entirely vertical (no tools needed).
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Jsizzle
> 24 hourHeres what you need to know: -HDR mode looks BEAUTIFUL. HDR is great for this monitor in fact. With HDR enabled, Dark Blacks, very opaque, accurate colors - most of all increased brightness and contrast, which is almost necessary with this monitor. The factory settings are a little bit dark for my tastes. Increasing brightness manually may also increase backlight bleed. Some reviewers say HDR doesnt make much difference, but it does. I bet some people do custom color adjustments, including increasing brightness, and in that case that would make HDR LESS noticeable, but that makes the blacks less dark. Both adjusting brightness/color settings or enabling HDR are good options, if you dont want to mess with HDR, but I prefer the HDR as I think it gives the best overall picture on this and I dont have to mess with factory settings. -GSync Capable with 144Hz refresh rates. Some users say G-Sync and HDR dont work together on this monitor... but they do. I have HDR enabled with GSync and have my frame rate max capped to 120 FPS in Nvidia Control panel. I can see that I am getting 120 FPS in games and can FEEL the difference between when GSync is on or off, so I know it works with HDR, which I NEVER turn off on this. - Crisp pictures. You can SEE the difference between 1080p and 2K. Very obvious improvement, especially with gaming. - Great viewing angles, virtually zero washout effect when viewing even from extreme angles -Solid refresh rates, to the average person, you will perceive no visible ghosting or screen-tearing in games with lots of action even with HDR enabled (which lowers response times... I dont know how low the response times are but the advertised <1ms does not apply to when any mode other that gaming/action mode are enabled. BE AWARE: Windows10 has HDR as a built in feature and it is BUGGY as heck, especially paired with NVidia cards, apparently. What will happen is that you will see the monitor colors get washed out and blacks will get grayish. It will look like a cheap TN panel. With only ONE of these monitors, I didnt have much issue, but having two of these 2K monitors hooked up to my RTX 3080 and suddenly Id have a monitor suddenly change to washed out when starting certain games or apps. IT IS NOT THE MONITOR if this happens to you. I believe some viewers complaining about picture quality caught the Windows HDR bug and didnt know about it or how to fix it. -Heres what I did to minimize it: 1) Enable HDR in Windows, and on the monitor 2) NVidia Control Panel > Color options... choose the option for limited and go with YCBCR 4.2.2... This is because Windows supports the HDR10 standard and you can ONLY get 8-bit option unless you enable this and go to limited mode. You will notice a small change in colors when enabling this. Everything gets slightly brighter and less subtle. In some games, you have to TURN OFF Windows HDR for it to work in the game (Red Dead Redemption 2) for example. If a monitor suddenly becomes washed out, while opening/closing apps you can toggle HDR on or off for that screen in display settings in Windows OR you can power the monitor on/off and it usually comes back to its full HDR glory. AGAIN be aware it is NOT a monitor issue. HDR is still Buggy and half-baked in Windows and googling Windows10 HDR will give you TONS of input (some different than mine) on how to deal with this. My advice is The cool thing about this monitor is that you have the empirically superior picture that ONLY and IPS panel can offer, and you can do it with features like 144Hz refresh rates and GSync enabled. To have the IPS panel benefits, you have to enable HDR. What is also cool is that if your graphics card cant push the frames high enough in competive shooters, so you are worried about ghosting in competitive shooters with fast action and abrupt screen movements, you can have TN-panel like performance with blazing fast response times, 144Hz freesync/GSync capable refresh rates, just by hitting a button to switch modes (Action mode) (disabling HDR). The result is that it loses some brightness and contrast. This is where a person would probably want to increase Contrast and brightness, and this would make your blacks become more dark gray... ie it will look like a budget gaming VA panel, or a TN panel with better color and viewing angles. That is essentially what this monitor is: It is a very good blend of lots of well-executed compromises. It is a cheap IPS panel with great picture, but HDR is MANDATORY to get that perfect IPS experience. That is perfectly fine. It also has some moderate, usually not noticeable, backlight bleed. Again, it is a compromise in exchange for not paying $2K for this 2K IPS monitor with fast refresh rates, backlight bleed is ~50% more than a top-of-the line IPS panel. If you are a competitive gamer who just HAS to have 1ms response times and 144Hz GSync, then this monitor will do that too, but the compromise is that HDR has to be disabled (action-mode), but it will require giving up the IPS eye-candy while I play that game. Personally I just accept that I mainly play Planet Coaster and RDR2 and I dont need to ever turn off HDR in those titles with my RTX 3080. Cons (which are NOT really cons if you know about monitor tech) - SOME backlight bleed (ie when the monitor is on a black loading screen -you can see where light bleeds through the bezel in a few spots, like someone has a flashlight behind your screen and some of that brightness actually bleeds through. Backlight bleed is basically a guarantee with EVERY IPS monitor ever made. The only question is HOW MUCH backlight bleed will you get. This model is middle of the road for backlight bleed, and I have 2 of these and both bleed a little differently. I would categorize backlight bleed as noticeable, but not noticeable when gaming unless you are gaming in a dark room, crawling through a dark dungeon. - Refresh rates go UP with HDR enabled (even though you can still get 144Hz refresh rate and GSync at the same time as HDR, to get the <1 ms response times you have to change to non-HDR modes, which is something I would NEVER want to do. For these users, who just want the fastest refresh rates while having deep blacks and bright whites, you want to purchase an at least equally, if not more expensive TN panel instead. HOWEVER, TN panels will GUARANTEE relatively washed out viewing angles, poor washed-out colors compared to IPS. Heres the pros and cons of the different panel types: IPS (this monitor) Great color accuracy and look. HDR. Black blacks, white whites. Good Refresh rates. PERFECT viewing angles. Con- backlight Bleed is noticeable in a dark room on a dark game. VA Panel Can have decent color accuracy and OK refresh rates / response times.. Viewing angles are not great, but usually OK. Wash-out occurs when viewing from angles, but not nearly as bad as TN panels. Contrast ratios are usually between TN and IPS. Usually backlight bleed not a problem. This is the ultimate master-of-none panel and usually exist marketed as gaming panels at 1080p only. Nothing wrong with a VA panel if it is a good one. TN Panel Best Contrast Ratios (Black Blacks, whitest Whites). NO noticeable backlight bleed. Tied with the latest IPS panel breakthroughs for having the fastest response times and highest refresh-rates for competive gaming. You basically cant beat a TN panel for having a combination of contrast ratios and refresh-rates/response-times The CONS however, are not insignificant. The best most expensive TN panels still suffer from poor viewing angles. If you are straight in front of it, the edges and your peripherals in the screen are subtly and more progressively washed out. This is the reason that the ideal screen for pro-gaming is usually a 24-inch TN panel because keeping the screen small keeps all the screen action in front of them, and reduces the washout that happens as the edge of the screen gets further away. The color accuracy is considered poor and would never be used by creative professionals, and make terrible screens for viewing movies and Netflix and such, due to the lesser color/ picture quality. These are screens just for the most die-hard competitive gamer. It is a tool really. This monitor looks (and acts) a lot like a TN panel (with better color/ viewing angles, worse contrast ratio) when in action mode. The rest of the time you get all those benefits of the IPS panel listed above So just a really cool monitor. A monitor is a very personal thing, so there is no right answer to user-preference, but I personally would NEVER do anything but IPS at this point now that they have overcome the refresh-rate limits of yesteryear. It is clearly the most advanced monitor tech out right now. This is a GREAT budget entry into the 144Hz 2K IPS world.
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Kelly
> 24 hourI just opened this for the first time and set it up, and there’s already a dead pixel. Such a shame because i was so excited and this killed my mood. I’ll probably update this review in the future to give a better review. For now, 3 stars for pixel.
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Winnifred Hammes
> 24 hourbest monitor i have ever owned.
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Jsizzle
> 24 hourHeres what you need to know: -HDR mode looks BEAUTIFUL. HDR is great for this monitor in fact. With HDR enabled, Dark Blacks, very opaque, accurate colors - most of all increased brightness and contrast, which is almost necessary with this monitor. The factory settings are a little bit dark for my tastes. Increasing brightness manually may also increase backlight bleed. Some reviewers say HDR doesnt make much difference, but it does. I bet some people do custom color adjustments, including increasing brightness, and in that case that would make HDR LESS noticeable, but that makes the blacks less dark. Both adjusting brightness/color settings or enabling HDR are good options, if you dont want to mess with HDR, but I prefer the HDR as I think it gives the best overall picture on this and I dont have to mess with factory settings. -GSync Capable with 144Hz refresh rates. Some users say G-Sync and HDR dont work together on this monitor... but they do. I have HDR enabled with GSync and have my frame rate max capped to 120 FPS in Nvidia Control panel. I can see that I am getting 120 FPS in games and can FEEL the difference between when GSync is on or off, so I know it works with HDR, which I NEVER turn off on this. - Crisp pictures. You can SEE the difference between 1080p and 2K. Very obvious improvement, especially with gaming. - Great viewing angles, virtually zero washout effect when viewing even from extreme angles -Solid refresh rates, to the average person, you will perceive no visible ghosting or screen-tearing in games with lots of action even with HDR enabled (which lowers response times... I dont know how low the response times are but the advertised <1ms does not apply to when any mode other that gaming/action mode are enabled. BE AWARE: Windows10 has HDR as a built in feature and it is BUGGY as heck, especially paired with NVidia cards, apparently. What will happen is that you will see the monitor colors get washed out and blacks will get grayish. It will look like a cheap TN panel. With only ONE of these monitors, I didnt have much issue, but having two of these 2K monitors hooked up to my RTX 3080 and suddenly Id have a monitor suddenly change to washed out when starting certain games or apps. IT IS NOT THE MONITOR if this happens to you. I believe some viewers complaining about picture quality caught the Windows HDR bug and didnt know about it or how to fix it. -Heres what I did to minimize it: 1) Enable HDR in Windows, and on the monitor 2) NVidia Control Panel > Color options... choose the option for limited and go with YCBCR 4.2.2... This is because Windows supports the HDR10 standard and you can ONLY get 8-bit option unless you enable this and go to limited mode. You will notice a small change in colors when enabling this. Everything gets slightly brighter and less subtle. In some games, you have to TURN OFF Windows HDR for it to work in the game (Red Dead Redemption 2) for example. If a monitor suddenly becomes washed out, while opening/closing apps you can toggle HDR on or off for that screen in display settings in Windows OR you can power the monitor on/off and it usually comes back to its full HDR glory. AGAIN be aware it is NOT a monitor issue. HDR is still Buggy and half-baked in Windows and googling Windows10 HDR will give you TONS of input (some different than mine) on how to deal with this. My advice is The cool thing about this monitor is that you have the empirically superior picture that ONLY and IPS panel can offer, and you can do it with features like 144Hz refresh rates and GSync enabled. To have the IPS panel benefits, you have to enable HDR. What is also cool is that if your graphics card cant push the frames high enough in competive shooters, so you are worried about ghosting in competitive shooters with fast action and abrupt screen movements, you can have TN-panel like performance with blazing fast response times, 144Hz freesync/GSync capable refresh rates, just by hitting a button to switch modes (Action mode) (disabling HDR). The result is that it loses some brightness and contrast. This is where a person would probably want to increase Contrast and brightness, and this would make your blacks become more dark gray... ie it will look like a budget gaming VA panel, or a TN panel with better color and viewing angles. That is essentially what this monitor is: It is a very good blend of lots of well-executed compromises. It is a cheap IPS panel with great picture, but HDR is MANDATORY to get that perfect IPS experience. That is perfectly fine. It also has some moderate, usually not noticeable, backlight bleed. Again, it is a compromise in exchange for not paying $2K for this 2K IPS monitor with fast refresh rates, backlight bleed is ~50% more than a top-of-the line IPS panel. If you are a competitive gamer who just HAS to have 1ms response times and 144Hz GSync, then this monitor will do that too, but the compromise is that HDR has to be disabled (action-mode), but it will require giving up the IPS eye-candy while I play that game. Personally I just accept that I mainly play Planet Coaster and RDR2 and I dont need to ever turn off HDR in those titles with my RTX 3080. Cons (which are NOT really cons if you know about monitor tech) - SOME backlight bleed (ie when the monitor is on a black loading screen -you can see where light bleeds through the bezel in a few spots, like someone has a flashlight behind your screen and some of that brightness actually bleeds through. Backlight bleed is basically a guarantee with EVERY IPS monitor ever made. The only question is HOW MUCH backlight bleed will you get. This model is middle of the road for backlight bleed, and I have 2 of these and both bleed a little differently. I would categorize backlight bleed as noticeable, but not noticeable when gaming unless you are gaming in a dark room, crawling through a dark dungeon. - Refresh rates go UP with HDR enabled (even though you can still get 144Hz refresh rate and GSync at the same time as HDR, to get the <1 ms response times you have to change to non-HDR modes, which is something I would NEVER want to do. For these users, who just want the fastest refresh rates while having deep blacks and bright whites, you want to purchase an at least equally, if not more expensive TN panel instead. HOWEVER, TN panels will GUARANTEE relatively washed out viewing angles, poor washed-out colors compared to IPS. Heres the pros and cons of the different panel types: IPS (this monitor) Great color accuracy and look. HDR. Black blacks, white whites. Good Refresh rates. PERFECT viewing angles. Con- backlight Bleed is noticeable in a dark room on a dark game. VA Panel Can have decent color accuracy and OK refresh rates / response times.. Viewing angles are not great, but usually OK. Wash-out occurs when viewing from angles, but not nearly as bad as TN panels. Contrast ratios are usually between TN and IPS. Usually backlight bleed not a problem. This is the ultimate master-of-none panel and usually exist marketed as gaming panels at 1080p only. Nothing wrong with a VA panel if it is a good one. TN Panel Best Contrast Ratios (Black Blacks, whitest Whites). NO noticeable backlight bleed. Tied with the latest IPS panel breakthroughs for having the fastest response times and highest refresh-rates for competive gaming. You basically cant beat a TN panel for having a combination of contrast ratios and refresh-rates/response-times The CONS however, are not insignificant. The best most expensive TN panels still suffer from poor viewing angles. If you are straight in front of it, the edges and your peripherals in the screen are subtly and more progressively washed out. This is the reason that the ideal screen for pro-gaming is usually a 24-inch TN panel because keeping the screen small keeps all the screen action in front of them, and reduces the washout that happens as the edge of the screen gets further away. The color accuracy is considered poor and would never be used by creative professionals, and make terrible screens for viewing movies and Netflix and such, due to the lesser color/ picture quality. These are screens just for the most die-hard competitive gamer. It is a tool really. This monitor looks (and acts) a lot like a TN panel (with better color/ viewing angles, worse contrast ratio) when in action mode. The rest of the time you get all those benefits of the IPS panel listed above So just a really cool monitor. A monitor is a very personal thing, so there is no right answer to user-preference, but I personally would NEVER do anything but IPS at this point now that they have overcome the refresh-rate limits of yesteryear. It is clearly the most advanced monitor tech out right now. This is a GREAT budget entry into the 144Hz 2K IPS world.
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Kelly
> 24 hourI just opened this for the first time and set it up, and there’s already a dead pixel. Such a shame because i was so excited and this killed my mood. I’ll probably update this review in the future to give a better review. For now, 3 stars for pixel.
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Paul
> 24 hourIf your looking for a affordable 2k resolution monitor look no further! This is a well made monitor with great colors and decent brightness! Its smooth frames are amazing and makes gaming and just watching content awesome. The main downside i had with this monitor was its HDR is a bit over saturated, i may need to adjust the setting to get it to a more natural looking color but as it stands now the colors look over saturated and off putting. Pros: - 2k resolution - 144 hz - good colors - decent price - monitor stand is rotation, height, and even swivel. (swivel is rare on stands so this is nice) Cons: - hdr is over saturated - system menus are a bit confusing - like many monitors designs the usb ports are useless if you have a multi monitor set up.
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rm88
> 24 hour-Not perfect though. The stand is bad, always wobbles. Build quality is decent -Brightness is not that great, but how bright do you need it? Also I wish they had put the connectors on the back instead of under it. - The picture quality is excellent, the colors are the best part of this monitor; very vibrant and accurate. Ive experienced eye fatigue from other monitors with similar specs, but not with this monitor. Fortunately the backlight bleed is minimal, there is only some slight glow on the bottom corners. Not as sharp as 4k of course. -Excellent for gaming Very smooth 144hz picture, maybe slight blur. It is free sync capable and gsync compatible, so you can get tear free gaming with either an amd or nvidia graphics card. I would buy this again. I wouldnt pay much for a similar monitor
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Ren
> 24 hourEasily on par with (and possibly exceeds?) the performance of my LG Ultragear. And zero bugs/glitches/RMA issues to address with a less-than-helpful support team. These guys are getting my money from now on.
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ellen
> 24 hourPurchased this after several agonizing hours reading monitor reviews on multiple websites. Were using this as an external monitor for a Windows laptop and a Chromebook, mostly for office work and some casual graphic design. Couldnt be happier with it! The picture looks great, and its usable even in bright ambient conditions. The ergonomics (especially height adjustment) are very welcome. The lack of USB ports could be viewed as disappointing, however, Acer does make a companion model of nearly the same monitor, but with USB ports, so if those are important to you, the option to add them is available (at a higher price, of course). Were not using this in an environment where were extremely sensitive to color accuracy or latency, so were not rendering any judgment on those aspects. But as an affordable 27 monitor with decent performance and good ergonomics, this monitor was a winner for us.