
I didn’t noticed any light bleed on my unit.Ĭolors are way better than TN of course, to compare with my brother Samsung c27hg70 I think colors are better on the Acer too. I find it has deeper blacks compared to my brother Samsung c27hg70 monitor, because there is some light bleed on his unit wich destroys blacks imo. The stand of the monitor is OK for me, pretty stable on my desktop no worries here, would be nice to have height adjustement but it’s OK.īlacks are deep, my TN monitor has deep blacks too, but the Nitro has deeper blacks. Image is way clearer than on my old TN monitor, I got no headache using it, it’s not the case with my old TN monitor, I often got headache with it (I’m wearing glasses with blue light filter).ġ44Hz feels good but not as good as the acer predator x241h I got a month ago (returned too because image was horrible, far more horrible than my old TN).


My current monitor is an old LG 60Hz TN panel (LG 2361W flatron) and that’s what I noticed with the Acer Nitro :Ģ7″ is a really nice size and 1440p is very a huge step from 1080p. So I bought the Acer Nitro VG270UPbmiipx (27 IPS 144Hz Freesync panel) 3 weeks ago and I already returned one unit. Does it translate into viable performance? Let's take a look.Hello everyone, I will start by saying sorry if my english is not very good but I’m french. There's no doubt that this is a premium product but with IPS, QHD resolution, 144Hz and G-Sync it sure has a lot to offer. Fortunately the panel is bright enough to make ULMB usable in darker environments. The latter feature is on/off only there is no adjustable pulse-width. The XB270HU also offers G-Sync and ULMB motion-blur reduction. Other performance parameters remain the same as with any other good IPS panel - good contrast, accurate grayscale, flat gamma tracking and in this instance, an sRGB color gamut. And that claim is backed by our photos, which you can see on the Viewing Angles, Uniformity, Response, Lag And Gaming page of this review. AHVA is IPS for sure, but offers better off-axis image quality. If you want to read more about it, see our review of the BenQ B元200PT monitor. It's important not to confuse A HVA (Advanced Hyper Viewing Angle) with A MVA (Advanced Multi-Domain Vertical Alignment), which is a completely different panel type. The principle reason is the particular flavor used here - AHVA.

But they were both TN screens and though they're excellent examples of the technology, the IPS-based XB270HU takes the image quality up a notch. We were impressed with the quality of Acer's other gaming monitors, the XG270HU FreeSync and XB280HK Ultra HD.
