NVIDIA responds to G-Sync ultimate version brightness requirements "shrink": To take care of OLED panels


This week, some netizens accidentally discovered that NVIDIA has lowered the entry threshold of G-Sync Ultimate (Ultimate Edition), reducing the brightness requirement to 600 nits from the previous 1000 nits.

The outside world was immediately confused, and NVIDIA issued a media statement.

According to NVIDIA, they said that brightness is important but not the only indicator of G-Sync Ultimate. Many OLED panels or dot matrix backlit LCDs have ultra-high or even infinite contrast performance at 600~700 nits, which cannot be ignored either. .

NVIDIA's explanation is a little pale, and if it's blunt, it's your own turf.

However, everyone noticed that G-Sync Ultimate lowered the brightness threshold because the Acer X34S monitor with a maximum brightness of 550 nits was marked as G-Sync Ultimate certified. However, NVIDIA stated at the end of the statement that the X34S was mislabeled and was actually just a normal G-Sync monitor, and the content of the web page has been modified.

Speaking of NV, there is also a bit of "not talking about martial ethics". This time Acer is lying down the gun for nothing, and it has become a victim.

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