![]() ![]() The Odyssey OLED G9’s 240Hz refresh rate handled those high frame rates with ease. Thanks to that system’s specs, I ran Doom Eternal at around 160 frames per second at high settings. I had the monitor connected to the Dell XPS 8950, which has a 12th gen Intel Core i5-12600k processor, an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GPU and 16GB of RAM. I didn’t see a hint of screen tearing or choppiness, even when there was a lot of action in games like Cyberpunk 2077 and Doom Eternal. The monitor features Adaptive Sync and AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, which also help games run as smoothly as possible. ![]() ![]() The Neo Quantum Processor Pro chip powering the monitor did a splendid job of ensuring blazing-fast performance, which is especially useful for FPS and fighting games. The 0.03ms response time all but eliminated any perceptible input lag. Thanks to its blistering high 240Hz refresh rate every game I played ran silky smooth. Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 review: Performance In short, the Odyssey OLED G8’s brightness and color accuracy aren’t far off from the competition. The Predator X32 FP’s display achieved 226% of the sRGB color gamut and 160% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, with a Delta-E value of 0.26. How does that compare to other gaming monitors? In its Standard mode, the AW3423DWF covered 194.5% of the sRGB color gamut and 137.8% of the DCI-P3 gamut, with a Delta-E value of 0.1. We saw similar values across most of the available display modes. Color accuracy is excellent with a Delta-E value of 0.12 (closer to 0 is ideal). In Standard mode, the display covered 183.3% of the sRGB color gamut and 129.9% of the more demanding DCI-P3 color space (closer to 100% is best). Like the Odyssey OLED G8, most of the Odyssey OLED G9’s display modes produce oversaturated colors. That said, the Odyssey OLED G8 achieved 357 nits of HDR brightness across 10 percent of the display in our testing, which is fairly bright. That’s on par with the Alienware AW3423DWF (236 nits) but much dimmer than the Acer Predator X32 FP (404 nits) in their respective standard modes. When we pointed our Klein-10A colorimeter at the display, we found that the Odyssey OLED G9’s screen achieved an average brightness of 161 nits of brightness in Game Standard mode and 236 nits in non-gaming Standard mode. Our lab tests corroborate my anecdotal experience. Display benchmarks Header Cell - Column 0 ![]()
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