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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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02/11/24 | Best Buy | $549.99 |
0 |
02/06/24 | Best Buy | $516.99 popular |
64 |
01/19/24 | Best Buy | $550 |
3 |
01/05/24 | Best Buy | $550 |
9 |
12/29/23 | Best Buy | $599 |
1 |
12/18/23 | Best Buy | $550 frontpage |
91 |
12/08/23 | Best Buy | $550 frontpage |
62 |
11/24/23 | Best Buy | $549.99 |
5 |
10/30/23 | Best Buy | $550 frontpage |
56 |
10/27/23 | Best Buy | $550 frontpage |
63 |
10/22/23 | Best Buy | $600 frontpage |
66 |
09/23/23 | Best Buy | $599.99 |
2 |
09/20/23 | Best Buy | $649.99 |
9 |
06/30/23 | Best Buy | $600 frontpage |
69 |
02/25/23 | Best Buy | $600 frontpage |
76 |
01/09/23 | Best Buy | $650 |
6 |
12/18/22 | Best Buy | $570 frontpage |
154 |
11/17/22 | Best Buy | $570 frontpage |
84 |
11/13/22 | Best Buy | $569.99 popular |
19 |
10/23/22 | Best Buy | $570 frontpage |
168 |
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Refresh Rate is only 60 Hz. If all you watch is streaming and OTA stuff, it's totally fine and will obviously still have great picture quality, much better than most any LCDs at this price point.
Tradeoff is features. If those features are not useful to you, then save a few bucks. Otherwise, step up to the C2 for 30% more cost and you get them.
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For example, PC games have had vertical sync for like 2 decades. If we are just hooking a gaming computer/laptop directly to the TV then all games would be able to use V-sync.
Do the newer consoles not have vertical sync?
VRR is very necessary, otherwise it wouldn't be a big selling point and you wouldn't have so many gamers (myself included) swearing by it. The consoles have v-sync, but several new games still have horrible screen tearing. PC still has screen tearing on plenty of games, too. The new Star Wars: Jedi Survivor has screen tearing towards the top of the screen, when in performance mode. The Mass Effect collection had really bad tearing in certain parts of the game. There are some others that I can't think of off the top of my head right now, but while VRR doesn't always remedy the situation (like with Jedi Survivor), it does help and it completely remedies most cases. For instance, God of War Ragnarok has a high performance mode (if you have a 120hz display) that fluctuates between around 70fps-120fps. It's constantly going up and down, but because of VRR, it doesn't look choppy and the screen doesn't tear, because the TV is adjusting its own framerate to match the game's rate. Any hardcore gamer will tell you VRR is a Godsend. It's sort of something you just have to experience for yourself. I'm sure someone else can explain it better than I can. I just know what I see. I have a C2 OLED and I've experimented with turning VRR off and on and there really is a noticeable difference. VRR really is, pardon the pun, a game changing feature.
If folks are OK with a dim TV and don't mind the remote it's a decent value.
I have no experience myself, but I've been through lots and lots of comments on these LG OLEDs and I can tell you that there are lots and lots of people using them as monitors. I think most use the 42" size, but I've seen others who use 48" (I've also seen complaints that the 42" doesn't go on sale). I think most people go with the C model, so I'm not sure if the A model is just as good as a monitor.
But yeah, you're not at all crazy for thinking about this.
Or just get vr...quest 3 comes out in about a month for less money than this
Mostly watch shows and movies on it at night, it's more than bright enough, even in the day, but I usually close the curtains of the windows facing it. Also I set it to it's lowest brightness setting when it's late and I'm getting ready to go to sleep. I'm more than satisfied with it at the price I got it for.
I will say I debate on hooking a external streaming device too it, since I am annoyed with lgs constant app updates that require you to log in to their service just to update . (For example 1-2 times a week for Netflix alone) also they change the user terms multiple times and require agreement just to use the smart features, if you don't they cut off access. But with that said the TV preforms great in most use cases for the price I paid.
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Refresh Rate is only 60 Hz. If all you watch is streaming and OTA stuff, it's totally fine and will obviously still have great picture quality, much better than most any LCDs at this price point.
Tradeoff is features. If those features are not useful to you, then save a few bucks. Otherwise, step up to the C2 for 30% more cost and you get them.
Please list major differences between the. A and C!
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