Tuesday, April 23rd 2024

LG Display to Mass Produce World's First Gaming OLED Panel With Switchable Refresh Rate and Resolution

LG Display, the world's leading innovator of display technologies, announced today that it has developed the first-ever Gaming OLED panel with a switchable refresh rate and resolution. The company has begun mass production of the 31.5-inch panel this month, accelerating its push into the high-end gaming display market with new concept products.

This groundbreaking Gaming OLED panel allows users to freely choose between a high refresh rate (FHD 480 Hz) and a high-resolution mode (UHD 240 Hz) depending on the content.
In high refresh rate mode, users can enjoy games where speed and screen changes are particularly important, such as first-person shooter (FPS) or racing genres. Switching to high-resolution mode offers an exceptionally immersive experience watching movies with rich visual effects or high-definition 4K content. By comparison, conventional panels have a fixed resolution even when the refresh rate is changed, limiting their versatility for multiple applications.

Refresh rate refers to the number of images displayed on a monitor per second, while resolution represents the number of pixels that a screen can show. The higher the refresh rate, the smoother and sharper the images appear even during fast screen transitions, while a higher resolution enables more precise video and image quality.

LG Display's advanced solution is Dynamic Frequency & Resolution (DFR), its own independently developed new technology. With the arrival of DFR, users can choose which to prioritize between refresh rate and resolution by adjusting the image processing speed. IT has been applied for the first time with LG Display's 31.5-inch Gaming OLED panel.

The company's Gaming OLED panel is also equipped with other LG Display technologies to enhance its immersive experience. These include META Technology 2.0 based on the company's Micro Lens Array (MLA) innovation, which maximizes the emission of light from organic materials to elevate image quality. Also, Thin Actuator Sound technology, which directly generates sound from the screen without a separate speaker, has been adopted to provide more vivid sound.

LG Display plans to supply its new 31.5-inch Gaming OLED panel to global gaming gear brands, starting with LG Electronics. The company is accelerating its expansion into the high-end gaming display market from this year with a full lineup of Gaming OLED panels spanning 27, 31.5, 34, 39, and 45 inches.

Unlike LCDs, which require backlighting, the company's Gaming OLED panels are self-emissive, enabling each pixel to produce perfect blacks and lifelike image quality. With an ultra-high refresh rate (480 Hz), they also have the fastest response time (0.03 ms) of any panel on the market.

Moreover, Gaming OLEDs have less potential to cause eye fatigue than LCD screens even during long gaming sessions, as they emit half the amount of blue light and produce no headache-associated flicker.

"We will create new customer value with OLED's differentiated technologies - such as by offering perfect blacks, fast response times, and ultra-high refresh rates - and strengthen our leadership in the high-end gaming display market," said Won-seok Kang, Vice President and Head of the Large Display Product Planning Division at LG Display.
Source: LG Display
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32 Comments on LG Display to Mass Produce World's First Gaming OLED Panel With Switchable Refresh Rate and Resolution

#26
LazyGamer
Still waiting for idea of affordable OLED monitor without 6516165165Hz refresh rate and XYZ gaming bla bla to pop into someones brain.
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#27
Tomorrow
LazyGamerStill waiting for idea of affordable OLED monitor without 6516165165Hz refresh rate and XYZ gaming bla bla to pop into someones brain.
Define "affordable". Depending on income this can vary wildly. So what you want is a 60Hz OLED? At what price?
The cheapest desktop monitor OLED is AOC Agon AG276QZD at 680€. It's a 27" 1440p WOLED at 240Hz. I doubt it would be much cheaper at 120Hz or 60Hz unless the resolution is downgraded to 1080p and size to 23".
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#28
LazyGamer
TomorrowDefine "affordable". Depending on income this can vary wildly. So what you want is a 60Hz OLED? At what price?
The cheapest desktop monitor OLED is AOC Agon AG276QZD at 680€. It's a 27" 1440p WOLED at 240Hz. I doubt it would be much cheaper at 120Hz or 60Hz unless the resolution is downgraded to 1080p and size to 23".
Yes. Give me 24" 1080P 60Hz OLED for < 300€. I will buy it for color quality and response time of OLED. I'm still on 1080P and playing at 60fps and happy with resolution and frame rate
Posted on Reply
#29
Tomorrow
LazyGamerYes. Give me 24" 1080P 60Hz OLED for < 300€. I will buy it for color quality and response time of OLED. I'm still on 1080P and playing at 60fps and happy with resolution and frame rate
Even then i doubt it would cost less than 300€. You have to accept that the world is moving to high refresh era (finally IMHO). Even office monitors are not always 60Hz anymore. Gaming monitors much more so where 75Hz is the budget and 144Hz is the low end.

Resolution is a bit more complex tho. 1080p is still fine at 21-23" sizes. 1440p is fine for 27" and i doubt we will move much past 4K at 32"+ sizes due to scaling issues and considering how hard it is to drive that many pixels. Not to mention the physical size since not everyone has space, or wants a TV sized monitor.
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#30
Bagerklestyne
BabaAORUS model has been selling on newegg. However, there is no DP2.1 video card out so how long are we going to be waiting on that?
True, but, I'd rather have a monitor that can do it and not need to upgrade for that later on. My video card is 3 and a bit years old now and there's a reasonable chance I'll upgrade it in the next gen.

The reason here is it's the same price as every other QD-OLED in my market (except for the Alienware which I don't want because of the fan)
Posted on Reply
#31
Baba
BagerklestyneTrue, but, I'd rather have a monitor that can do it and not need to upgrade for that later on. My video card is 3 and a bit years old now and there's a reasonable chance I'll upgrade it in the next gen.

The reason here is it's the same price as every other QD-OLED in my market (except for the Alienware which I don't want because of the fan)
I hear you. I'll be getting this too. I'm currently running a 6950XT which is enough for my 4k60 LG. With AMD going mid-range only, there is a chance they don't bother with DP2.1. Nvidia lagged AMD with HDMI 2.1 support. So there is this non-zero chance that there might not be DP2.1 support with next gen cards. Maybe these monitor makers have reached out to AMD and Nvidia regarding DP2.1 support.
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#32
Jeager
LazyGamerStill waiting for idea of affordable OLED monitor without 6516165165Hz refresh rate and XYZ gaming bla bla to pop into someones brain.
Exactly, fuck all those useless things, give us normal size/resolution/price with +100Hz and thats it
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