Cooler Master Tempest GZ2711 27” OLED Monitor
$299.99
$555.63
46% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Black
Screen Size: 27"
Top positive review
1 people found this helpful
Excellent picture quality, no dead pixels on mine, HDR is rather lackluster but hey, is there...
By Emmanuel Quezada on Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2023
Excellent picture quality, no dead pixels on mine, HDR is rather lackluster but hey, is there... IPS panel with excellent built quality, if you calibrate it correctly (the factory calibration is really good too), at this price this monitor is a bargain. Cons: the monitor has a bit of blacklight bleed (this is normal for IPS panels though). There are also small signs of vignetting that you'll forget the second time you look. I am not much of a gamer but I can tell you can do really well with this one, plus the design is low-key and very slick-looking IMO. Concerning quality control, going by my experience, there is nothing wrong after using it for a month.
Top critical review
17 people found this helpful
A Good Monitor Full of Faults (GP27U and GP27Q)
By missing_username(); on Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2023
Overall: It's a pretty solid monitor but has some pretty big issues. The Design Defect really kills a lot of enthusiasm I had with this monitor. Pros: Local Dimming: 5xx dimming zones is a must have for true HDR. Works great in HDR supported games. Ideally you'd get a nice and bright OLED but those just don't exist under 32". Brightness: It's basically a miniature sun when it wants to be. Price: It's basically the cheapest real HDR monitor you can get. Text: Text is so incredibly crisp. I didn't know I needed this in my life until now. It's my main drivers for upgrading to 4k. Ruined my second monitor for me though.... Cons: You have to restart the monitor every time it falls to sleep or enjoy a black or purple image. Design Defect: Monitor seems to have a design defect. The left and right sides of the screen are noticeably dimmer with the far most lines being completely invisible when you sit at a normal viewing angle. The closer you are the worse it gets. Seems to be an issue with the anti-reflectent coating. Local Dimming: It distracts from the experience when viewing non-HDR content. Text becomes hard to read in some situation and there's so much noticeable haloing on all websites. In games that don't support it bright objects in a dark scene become so fuzzy. Don't use it. Backlight glow: Never understood the whole thing with backlight bleed or glow but man do I now. It's BAD. VERY BAD. Wouldn't be an issue if Local Dimming worked in SDR content though. I initially though the monitor had some crazy bad anti reflective coating until I enabled Local Dimming. Software/OSD: It's a mess. It's easy enough to navigate as a tech enthusiast but so many settings are arbitrarily locked and some settings that don't make sense. (Example: There's some sort of "MPRT" thing that trails to everything that moves and idk what it's for) The software developers seem to have no clue what they're doing either releasing untested and broken or buggy software updates. Slowest monitor on Earth: It is by far the slowest monitor I have ever seen. Switching inputs, changing resolution, or turning HDR on and off takes a full 5 seconds. My computer literally gets to the login screen from a real shutdown and I'm STILL waiting for the monitor to turn on. Pressing the wrong key or dealing with a screwy game is just made even more frustrating when you're stuck waiting on this thing. Neutral: VRR: It does exist and it might work for you. It might not either. I don't use it.
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