Hardware Acer Predator Gaming Monitor XB271H and RTX 2060 buyer's remorse

the_randomizer

The Temp's official fox whisperer
OP
Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
31,284
Trophies
2
Age
38
Location
Dr. Wahwee's castle
XP
18,969
Country
United States
So, I'm currently experiencing buyer's remorse, like, pretty bad even for me. See, I've recently updated my PC to the following specs:

CPU: Core i7 9700K
GPU: - MSI RTX 2060
RAM : 32 GB DDR4 3200

Originally, it had a GTX 1660 TI which was very good all things considered, but for some reason, I felt a bit of peer pressure from seeing others with 2K monitors, beefier GPUs and what have you. That, and well, I feared the GPU would bottleneck the new CPU, so I tried to find info on that. Sure enough, I got the Acer monitor and the GPU at about the same time, but there are a few problems, for one, 1440 games on this GPU aren't exactly ideal, struggling even at non max settings, leaving me to think it was a huge mistake getting this monitor and GPU at the same time, costing me roughly 800 dollars for both. Then we have the monitor, an IPS display, which looks amazing, but has ghosting issues even with overdrive set to normal, like, it has 4 ms grey to grey, and I can't figure out any way to further reduce it like on my last monitor. Then we have the issue of 120 Hz vs 60 Hz, and I believe the ghosting looks a bit worse on 60, but then games run smoother for me, and I focus on RPGs, emulators, but no FPS games or eSports for me at all.


- What can I do to improve the ghosting?
- Should I return this and get the 1080p version of the Acer Predator Gaming Monitor 27" XB271H instead?
- Should I return my RTX 2070 and put my 1660 TI back in, despite it not being as strong as a 1080 or 2080 but still good?

I should note that some games, even Star Ocean 4 on Steam, had some stuttering on occasion at 2560 x 1440 120 Hz, I've yet to test the 60 Hz version. I should've gotten the TN panel, with the major only downside is viewing angles. I get paid this Friday, but who knows how
long shipping will take for me to get this one back to Amazon, and the 1080p version to where I live. Why the deuce I didn't do more research, I don't know, and now I'm paying the price of being down a large chunk of change. And yes, I can get my money back, but dammit, I don't
know what my options are -_-
 

raystriker

The powers that be
Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2011
Messages
1,528
Trophies
1
XP
2,607
Country
India
So, I'm currently experiencing buyer's remorse, like, pretty bad even for me. See, I've recently updated my PC to the following specs:

CPU: Core i7 9700K
GPU: - MSI RTX 2060
RAM : 32 GB DDR4 3200

Originally, it had a GTX 1660 TI which was very good all things considered, but for some reason, I felt a bit of peer pressure from seeing others with 2K monitors, beefier GPUs and what have you. That, and well, I feared the GPU would bottleneck the new CPU, so I tried to find info on that. Sure enough, I got the Acer monitor and the GPU at about the same time, but there are a few problems, for one, 1440 games on this GPU aren't exactly ideal, struggling even at non max settings, leaving me to think it was a huge mistake getting this monitor and GPU at the same time, costing me roughly 800 dollars for both. Then we have the monitor, an IPS display, which looks amazing, but has ghosting issues even with overdrive set to normal, like, it has 4 ms grey to grey, and I can't figure out any way to further reduce it like on my last monitor. Then we have the issue of 120 Hz vs 60 Hz, and I believe the ghosting looks a bit worse on 60, but then games run smoother for me, and I focus on RPGs, emulators, but no FPS games or eSports for me at all.


- What can I do to improve the ghosting?
- Should I return this and get the 1080p version of the Acer Predator Gaming Monitor 27" XB271H instead?
- Should I return my RTX 2070 and put my 1660 TI back in, despite it not being as strong as a 1080 or 2080 but still good?

I should note that some games, even Star Ocean 4 on Steam, had some stuttering on occasion at 2560 x 1440 120 Hz, I've yet to test the 60 Hz version. I should've gotten the TN panel, with the major only downside is viewing angles. I get paid this Friday, but who knows how
long shipping will take for me to get this one back to Amazon, and the 1080p version to where I live. Why the deuce I didn't do more research, I don't know, and now I'm paying the price of being down a large chunk of change. And yes, I can get my money back, but dammit, I don't
know what my options are -_-
-Let me get this straight...do you have a 2070 or a 2060?
-A 2070 with 1440p should be able to do 60+fps, so your experience is definitely odd.
 
Last edited by raystriker,

Xzi

Time to fly, 621
Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2013
Messages
17,781
Trophies
3
Location
The Lands Between
Website
gbatemp.net
XP
8,660
Country
United States
I was recently shopping around for a 1440p 144Hz monitor, and after a lot of research I ended up coming to the conclusion that IPS simply isn't worth it on a high refresh rate/fast response time panel. Not only is there a markup for it compared to TN and VA panels, ghosting and poor blacks seem to be universal issues across all manufacturers. I ended up settling on a refurbished AOC Agon, which I'm very pleased with. The one drawback being that I can't tune the colors to exactly match the hue and tone of my IPS 4K TV, but they aren't any less vibrant and I just stopped noticing it after a while. Obviously not an issue unless you're going for a multi-monitor setup anyway.

So yeah, I'd vote return the monitor and pick up a different brand or model with a TN or VA panel. Stick with 1440p for future-proofing, though, especially if you plan on getting a PS5 or XBSX at any point. Also: regardless of which GPU you end up sticking with, it should be able to drive some games at 120+ FPS, even if they aren't the very latest AAA releases.

As to the 1660 Ti vs RTX 2060, I'll admit to a bit of bias up front because I think RTX cards have a really poor price-to-performance ratio. Even speaking objectively, you're only gaining about 1 tflop of performance in that exchange, and spending quite a bit of extra money to do it. Not to mention the RTX 2060 isn't powerful enough to enable ray-tracing without totally tanking your FPS. Again I'm going to recommend you return it, and if you HAVE to upgrade now, get a used GTX 1070 or 1080 still under warranty on eBay. Otherwise look into AMD cards or just wait for Nvidia's 3000 series to release, at which point RTX cards should see a price drop.
 
  • Like
Reactions: the_randomizer

Xzi

Time to fly, 621
Member
Joined
Dec 26, 2013
Messages
17,781
Trophies
3
Location
The Lands Between
Website
gbatemp.net
XP
8,660
Country
United States
Yeah, this was really a bad time to "upgrade". RTX3000 and RDNA2 are due in a few months, and they promise to be much better and aggressively priced than the previous generation.
Depends on whether AMD's next set of GPUs can challenge Nvidia on the high-end of performance. If not, I expect the same ridiculous launch pricing for the 3000 series that the 2000 series had.
 
Last edited by Xzi,
  • Like
Reactions: the_randomizer

the_randomizer

The Temp's official fox whisperer
OP
Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
31,284
Trophies
2
Age
38
Location
Dr. Wahwee's castle
XP
18,969
Country
United States
I was recently shopping around for a 1440p 144Hz monitor, and after a lot of research I ended up coming to the conclusion that IPS simply isn't worth it on a high refresh rate/fast response time panel. Not only is there a markup for it compared to TN and VA panels, ghosting and poor blacks seem to be universal issues across all manufacturers. I ended up settling on a refurbished AOC Agon, which I'm very pleased with. The one drawback being that I can't tune the colors to exactly match the hue and tone of my IPS 4K TV, but they aren't any less vibrant and I just stopped noticing it after a while. Obviously not an issue unless you're going for a multi-monitor setup anyway.

So yeah, I'd vote return the monitor and pick up a different brand or model with a TN or VA panel. Stick with 1440p for future-proofing, though, especially if you plan on getting a PS5 or XBSX at any point. Also: regardless of which GPU you end up sticking with, it should be able to drive some games at 120+ FPS, even if they aren't the very latest AAA releases.

As to the 1660 Ti vs RTX 2060, I'll admit to a bit of bias up front because I think RTX cards have a really poor price-to-performance ratio. Even speaking objectively, you're only gaining about 1 tflop of performance in that exchange, and spending quite a bit of extra money to do it. Not to mention the RTX 2060 isn't powerful enough to enable ray-tracing without totally tanking your FPS. Again I'm going to recommend you return it, and if you HAVE to upgrade now, get a used GTX 1070 or 1080 still under warranty on eBay. Otherwise look into AMD cards or just wait for Nvidia's 3000 series to release, at which point RTX cards should see a price drop.

There is the RTX 2060 super, which is better than vanilla 2060, but again, I've decided to send this monitor back, but not without getting a ASUS VG278QR to replace the one I had before (which I gave to my parents and they love it). It's pretty cheap, and ia TN panel with super fast response time. I've learned my lesson to be sure, the hard way, but I'm glad I can get full refunds on the monitor and GPU.

Yeah, this was really a bad time to "upgrade". RTX3000 and RDNA2 are due in a few months, and they promise to be much better and aggressively priced than the previous generation.

Perhaps, I've always been an NVidia fanboy to be honest, I'll probably stick to my 1660 TI as it's still a very good card IMO. I think my problem was, I was trying to emulate my older brother, who has a beefy PC rig of his own (more so than mine) and well, yeah, lesson learned *whew*.

Is VA that much worse than IPS? I've heard that there's quite a bit of ghosting
 
Last edited by the_randomizer,
  • Like
Reactions: Xzi

FAST6191

Techromancer
Editorial Team
Joined
Nov 21, 2005
Messages
36,798
Trophies
3
XP
28,373
Country
United Kingdom
If something says gaming in the title I usually expect a 50% tax over something equivalent, that or a shiny bezel.

Likewise pumping resolution and framerate... if you double the framerate you effectively double the pixels needed to be pushed, and resolution bumps vary (4K being basically 4 1080 monitors which is 4 times the fun, and if you are also bumping to 120fps that now becomes 8 times the baseline 1080p60. 2560x1440 is still 16:9 and only a slight bump at about 78% more pixels). Unless your new GPU is going to be that many times faster you find yourself going backwards in performance. If it is a whole new tech, the game happens to make use of the tech and it is clocked that much more (say entry level old to higher end new) you might stay in place but eh.
Running in place is not so bad compared to empty changes ("I get 300fps even during high action... and my monitor is 60Hz") but it is not something I would care to drop real coin on.
I remain dubious of the perks of 120+fps on non CRT monitors or VR goggles (at least until proper motion blur is cracked) but it is at least a goal I guess.

Also 2k is a term people are unironically using? Bloody marketing parasites.
Does it have many perks for gaming, at least outside of games where you are looking into the extreme rifle distance a lot (not so many these days, and at 78% your original 4 pixels is now maybe 9 but crammed into an even smaller space) or RTS games that effectively allow you to cheat by having more on the screen at once does it make any odds?

Personally I would have rather gone for an ultrawide (21:9 maybe), or actually did a proper resolution upgrade and had a look at the 4K world (though outside of spreadsheets, CAD and maybe video editing of some types I am not convinced there either). As mentioned though this is probably not the best time to be investing in higher end stuff with actual change new stuff due before long.
 

The Real Jdbye

*is birb*
Member
Joined
Mar 17, 2010
Messages
23,355
Trophies
4
Location
Space
XP
13,944
Country
Norway
There is the RTX 2060 super, which is better than vanilla 2060, but again, I've decided to send this monitor back, but not without getting a ASUS VG278QR to replace the one I had before (which I gave to my parents and they love it). It's pretty cheap, and ia TN panel with super fast response time. I've learned my lesson to be sure, the hard way, but I'm glad I can get full refunds on the monitor and GPU.



Perhaps, I've always been an NVidia fanboy to be honest, I'll probably stick to my 1660 TI as it's still a very good card IMO. I think my problem was, I was trying to emulate my older brother, who has a beefy PC rig of his own (more so than mine) and well, yeah, lesson learned *whew*.

Is VA that much worse than IPS? I've heard that there's quite a bit of ghosting
VA in my opinion is not worse, it's just different. TN has its strengths (fast response times...) IPS has its strengths (good viewing angles...) and VA is inbetween, being pretty decent in all aspects but excelling at none. That said VA is not a bad one to go for. My new TV has a VA panel and I love it. I'd say VA is largely an improvement over TN and depending on your use case, may be a better choice than IPS.
 
Last edited by The Real Jdbye,
  • Like
Reactions: the_randomizer

the_randomizer

The Temp's official fox whisperer
OP
Member
Joined
Apr 29, 2011
Messages
31,284
Trophies
2
Age
38
Location
Dr. Wahwee's castle
XP
18,969
Country
United States
VA in my opinion is not worse, it's just different. TN has its strengths (fast response times...) IPS has its strengths (good viewing angles...) and VA is inbetween, being pretty decent in all aspects but excelling at none. That said VA is not a bad one to go for. My new TV has a VA panel and I love it. I'd say VA is largely an improvement over TN and depending on your use case, may be a better choice than IPS.

Already on its way, the Asus VG278QR 1080p 165 Hz 0.5 ms gtg display. I'm used to high quality TN panels at 1080p, but given this will be used with my RTX 2060, 120 Hz won't be an issue at that res.
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum

General chit-chat
Help Users
  • AncientBoi @ AncientBoi:
    ooowwww a new way for me to beat NFS 510 :D @SylverReZ
    +1
  • SylverReZ @ SylverReZ:
    @AncientBoi, Yeah, believe you can do PSP games as well. But a Pi5 is much powerful in comparison.
    +2
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Not sure about other models of Pi4 but the Pi 4 B with 8GBs OCed to 2Ghz handles PSP really great except like 1 game I found and it is playable it just looks bad lol Motor Storm Arctic something or other.
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Other games I can have turned up to like 2X and all kinds of enhancements, Motorstorm hmmm nope 1X and no enhancements lol
  • Veho @ Veho:
    Waiting for Anbernic's rg[whatever]SP price announcement, gimme.
    +1
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    I will admit that one does seem more interesting than the usual Ambernic ones, and I already liked those.
  • Veho @ Veho:
    I dread the price point.
    +1
  • Veho @ Veho:
    This looks like one of their premium models, so... $150 :glare:
    +1
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    To me that seems reasonable.
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    I mean since basically all the games are errmmm free lol
  • Veho @ Veho:
    I mean yeah sure but the specs are the same as a $50 model, it's just those pesky "quality of life" things driving up the price, like an actually working speaker, or buttons that don't melt, and stuff like that.
    +1
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    I think all in my Pi 4 was well north of 200 bucks 150ish for the Pi 4 the case the fancy cooler, then like 70 for the 500GB MicroSD then like 70 for the Xbox controller. But honestly it's a nice set up I really enjoy and to me was worth every penny. (even bought more controllers for 2 or 4 player games.) hmmm have never played any 2 player games yet :(
  • Veho @ Veho:
    Yeah that's what I hate about the RPi, it's supposedly $30 or something but it takes an additional $200 of accessories to actually turn it into a working something.
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    yes that's the expensive part lol
  • Veho @ Veho:
    I mean sure it's flexible and stuff but so is uremum but it's fiddly.
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Yeah a lot of it I consider a hobby, using Batocera I am constantly adjusting the collection adding and removing stuff, scraping the artwork. Haven't even started on some music for the theme... Also way down the road I am considering attempting to do a WiiFlow knock off lol
  • Veho @ Veho:
    I want everything served on a plate plz ktnx, "work" is too much work for me.
  • Veho @ Veho:
    Hmm, with that in mind, maybe a complete out-the-box solution with all the games collected, pacthed and optimized for me would be worth $150 :unsure:
  • Psionic Roshambo @ Psionic Roshambo:
    Yeah it's all choice and that's a good thing :)
  • Bunjolio @ Bunjolio:
    animal crossing new leaf 11pm music
  • Bunjolio @ Bunjolio:
    avatars-kKKZnC8XiW7HEUw0-KdJMsw-t1080x1080.jpg
    wokey d pronouns
  • SylverReZ @ SylverReZ:
    What its like to do online shopping in 1998: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwag5XE8oJo
    SylverReZ @ SylverReZ: What its like to do online shopping in 1998: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwag5XE8oJo