Introduction, Specifications, and Packaging
This Nixeus Vue packs a great punch for a 24″ LCD!
Introduction:
We have reviewed a lot of Variable Refresh Rate displays over the past several years now, and for the most part, these displays have come with some form of price premium attached. Nvidia’s G-Sync tech requires an additional module that adds some cost to the parts list for those displays. AMD took a while to get their FreeSync tech pushed through the scaler makers, and with the added effort needed to implement these new parts, display makers naturally pushed the new features into their higher end displays first. Just look at the specs of these displays:
- ASUS PG278Q 27in TN 1440P 144Hz G-Sync
- Acer XB270H 27in TN 1080P 144Hz G-Sync
- Acer XB280HK 28in TN 4K 60Hz G-Sync
- Acer XB270HU 27in IPS 1440P 144Hz G-Sync
- LG 34UM67 34in IPS 25×18 21:9 48-75Hz FreeSync
- BenQ XL2730Z 27in TN 1440P 40-144Hz FreeSync
- Acer XG270HU 27in TN 1440P 40-144Hz FreeSync
- ASUS MG279Q 27in IPS 1440P 144Hz FreeSync (35-90Hz)
Most of the reviewed VRR panels are 1440P or higher, and the only 1080P display currently runs $500. This unfortunately leaves VRR technology at a price point that is simply out of reach of gamers unable to drop half a grand on a display. What we need was a good 1080P display with a *full* VRR range. Bonus points to high refresh rates and in the case of a FreeSync display, a minimum refresh rate low enough that a typical game will not run below it. This shouldn’t be too hard since 1080P is not that demanding on even lower cost hardware these days. Who was up to this challenge?
Nixeus has answered this call with their new Nixeus Vue display. This is a 24” 1080P 144Hz FreeSync display with a VRR bottom limit of 30 FPS. It comes in two models, distinguished by a trailing letter in the model. The NX-VUE24B contains a ‘base’ model stand with only tilt support, while the NX-VUE24A contains a ‘premium’ stand with full height, rotation, and tilt support.
Does the $330-350 dollar Nixues Vue 24" FreeSync monitor fit the bill?
Specifications (source):
- Screen Size: 24 Inches TN
- Maximum Resolution: 1920 X 1080
- Backlit: LED
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Color Support: 16.7 Million (SRGB)
- Brightness: 300cd/M2 (Typical)
- Native Contrast Ratio: 1000:1
- Viewing Angles: 170 Horizontal/160 Vertical
- Refresh Rate: 144Hz (AMD FreeSync™ Range 30Hz To 144Hz)
- Response Time: 1ms (Gray To Gray)
- Pixel Pitch: 0.276mm
- Input Port: Dual-Link DVI (Up To 144Hz), HDMI (Up To 120Hz), VGA 15-Pin, DisplayPort 1.2a (Up To 144Hz)
- Speakers: Stereo Speakers
- Audio Input Port: 3.5mm Audio Jack (When Using With VGA And DVI Connections)
- VESA Mounts 3.937″ X 3.937″ (100mm X 100mm)
Packaging:
We received an early production sample of the Nixeus NX-VUE24 with the ‘B’ type stand. We could not evaluate retail packaging but were provided a list of what will come in the box:
- Nixeus Vue 24” 1920×1080 FreeSync™ 144Hz Gaming Monitor (NX-VUE24)
- Stand Base x 1 (with 4 screws)
- Stand Shaft x 1 (with 4 screws)
- Black DisplayPort to DisplayPort Cable x 1
- Power Adapter & Power Cable x 1
- NX-VUE24 Quick Start Guide
- 3.5mm AUX Audio Cable
Allyn, you forgot one item
Allyn, you forgot one item for the “Cons” list:
“Not as cool of a name as Wasabi Mango”
Am I missing something, I
Am I missing something, I thought the point to Freesync was it would not come at a price premium. There are a variety of 24″ 144hz 1080p TN monitors out there that cost $100 less than this and the only feature they lack in comparison is Freesync. The everything about Freesync’s value has been aimed at it being a zero cost addition. If you are going to be willing to pay a premium for frame syncing technology why not get the superioir version in Gsync. I don’t understand why this monitor is not $250 or less.
I’ve said this ever since
I’ve said this ever since “freesync” was announced, and that is, if you think that a monitor manufacturer is going to add increased functionality to a product and give it away for free then you fooling yourself.
Yes, freesync is cheaper, but it was a dumb move on AMD’s part, because they aren’t reaping the rewards of their efforts, unlike Nvidia.
Say what you will about the proprietary nature of Gsync, at they’re profitable.
i am not advocating for AMD,
i am not advocating for AMD, but u can’t take a panel and put a Freesync logo (or some other technology) on it without some engineering .
the cheapest Gsync monitor on pcpartpicker is selling for $380
There is no such thing as
There is no such thing as 'zero cost addition' when there are only some scaler parts available with adaptive sync support. In many cases, manufacturers are having to certify a new scaler *and* a panel that is on that scaler's short list of compatible glass (compatible with the wider refresh rate range). Sure they don't have to buy a module from the GPU vendor, but there is still a great deal of effort involved in creating a new display model that was not as easy as it was to design the previous generation of.
At first perhaps, but if its
At first perhaps, but if its easy for scalars to integrate additional costs should become negligible, one of the benefits of a free market & competition.
amazing review
Wasabi Mango
amazing review
Wasabi Mango and now Nixeus ,i have never heard of these brands before , next thing is cheap Korean monitors that support freesync .
unlike Gsync ,every now and then a new Freesync monitor come out
That’s already happening 🙂
That's already happening 🙂
It seems that what you where
It seems that what you where calling vaporware in the beginning of this year, needed only a few months to take over the market. And in less than 5 months we moved down from 48Hz to 30Hz. In 2016 not even this argument will be valid for promoting GSync.
It also seems that people who where in favor of Adaptive Sync/Freesync, those with “serious stupidity and bad intentions” as someone was saying in the comments and you where totally agreeing we him, where right from the beginning. With Intel getting ready to support it, Adaptive Sync/Freesync will become the de facto standard. Then Nvidia will have to follow, which will be in the best interest of everyone.
30Hz still has yet to happen
30Hz still has yet to happen on the higher resolution panels that really need it.
I never called it vaporware, but it was *significantly* delayed, and had a lot of issues for a long time. Overdrive (in VRR mode) and pixel response time is still not as good as it is on FreeSync panels (don't take my word for it – read TFTCentral). All the while GSync panel owners have had panels that worked as they should (and with older generation GPUs as well). That alone made their solution easily worth the price premium IMO. There is still not a FreeSync panel out there that I would use daily.
You did. And I was
You did. And I was “desperate” back then when pointing at the Samsung 4K models that where coming in March. And no one was expecting Freesync to perform better than the one and a half year old GSync from day one.
Anyway
3rd page
Also, the gamma correction with ‘Gamma On’ (2.2):
NOT FOUND: files/review/2015-08-25/Calibration curves NX-VUE24 2015-08-20 120cdm² D6500 2.2 S XYZLUT+MTX.png
…was far more significant than what was required when calibrating with ‘Gamma Off’ (2.6):
NOT FOUND: files/review/2015-08-25/Calibration curves NX-VUE24 2015-08-21 120cdm² D6500 2.2 F-S XYZLUT+MTX (2.6).png
We therefore recommend calibrating this particular display set at ‘Gamma Off ‘ (2.6).
I checked these and the
I checked these and the images show properly here. Might try a force refresh of the page.
Yes they do now and for a few
Yes they do now and for a few hours. They where fixed about the time the ASUS Strix Radeon R9 Fury Review came out. I checked with another browser before posting about it here.
On the other hand there are
On the other hand there are numerous reports in forums all over the world about ROG Swifts failing after a few months of use, and they keep on failing.
btw. have you heard about the Range mods that a guy from 3dcenter.org made for various monitors. Tested and verified by a lot of FreeSync-Monitor owners, various models and manufacturers. Some managed to get the iirc LG from like 40Hz or 48 down to at least 33 Hz, sometimes even lower.
here is the original post
http://www.forum-3dcenter.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?p=10737128#post10737128
and here the translated post at hardocp
http://hardforum.com/showthread.php?t=1872620&highlight=
Everything fails.. look at
Everything fails.. look at the # of people complaining about the Asus MG279Q already on Amazon. Thats why manufacturers have something called a warranty.
Alright, I went to Amazon and
Alright, I went to Amazon and saw… nothing. ROG Swift literally “die”.
People complaining about dead pixels and bad quality is not the same as “monitor is dead”, “won’t turn on”, “has graphical glitches” etc.
I think individuals are
I think individuals are missing the point and concept behind Free-Sync. From my understanding and please correct me if I am wrong. Free-Sync technology is essentially license free for Vendors but requires specific chips and boards in order to work. Unlike G-Sync, it does not require a separate module made by Nvidia or AMD in order to work.
I personally do not think you can take a $230-$250 Asus 144Hz monitor and 1:1 ratio convert it into a Free-Sync platform. I don’t see it happening and in aspect of engineering not possible. The components itself on the Asus needs to be able to support it. Can’t pump 87 gas on a performance vehicle now can you?
Still looks cheap and ugly.
Still looks cheap and ugly. Plus TN? Bah!
IPS 2560×1440 is where its at.
You get what you pay for boys.
Ahh..the age ole comparison
Ahh..the age ole comparison from TN to IPS, 1080p vs 1440p. To each their own. I see benefits from both perspective. I personally have a 1440p IPS but I specifically use that for work when I deal with graphic/video editing. I personally still use my CRT for gaming. I see this as a viable option for those who wishes for a varable refresh-rate monitor and definitely comparable to the 24″ G-Sync. So to reach their own.
This cheap panel is still
This cheap panel is still *way* faster at pixel color changes than IPS glass with 'perfect' overdrive. That's the advantage of TN. Sure there are disadvantages, but for twitch stype FPS gaming, it's the way to go.
Allyn, I have the ASUS
Allyn, I have the ASUS VG248QE and the ACER XB270HU side by side.
I played all these twitch shooters from UT, Q3 to BF series to even fucking CoD on them both always at 144fps. GTX980 Ti driving these fps. I have noticed no friggin difference in input lag of feeling moving around quick with mouse movements. I do see clear difference in colors and overall graphics fidelity on the ACER panel thnx to IPS and the higher resolution. It also seems a tiny bit better overall thnx to VRR (G-Sync). I still have them both side by side so anyone saying otherwise do you also have both TN – IPS non VRR and VRR panel side by side and doing individual testing?
TN is not really the way to
TN is not really the way to go if you have the funds and want better VRR IPS 144Hz. I have it and am still same skill and feel no disadvantage at all going from TN 144Hz to IPS 144Hz VRR.
This is coming from someone that plays twitch shooters over a decade!
144 Hz is 144 Hz. Unless
144 Hz is 144 Hz. Unless the IPS has bothersome artifacts from overdrive, they should offer the same experience from a frame rate perspective. TN usually looks terrible to me. A lot of people don’t seem to notice it but it all depends on what you are used to. I am not really a gamer. I use a Dell U3011 30″ IPS at 60 Hz. Most things look spectacular on it, but it was close to a $1500 display originally.
Maybe you don’t realize that
Maybe you don't realize that I personally favor IPS panels, but it's been measured and documented that TN pixel response is faster than IPS.
If the over drive is perfect,
If the over drive is perfect, then it should come down to the refresh rate supported. If they both support 144 Hz, then you should not notice the difference as far as refresh rate is concerned. The IPS would have better color and better viewing angles and such, but can have artifacts due to the overdrive attempting to make up for the slower response time. I do remember some reports of shimmering effects due to overdrive on LCD panels but that was a while ago. The main issue now seems to be the ghosting, but this may not be that noticeable, depending on what you play. Anyway, when comparing TN and IPS displays side-by-side, the TN usually looks terrible to me. Unless the overdrive artifacts are really bad, I would still say go with the IPS if you can afford it. If you are an fps gamer on a strict budget, then I agree that TN may still be the way to go.
I think free sync will equal g-sync eventually, but it will require a while for scaler manufactures to respond to g-sync features. They are not going to use an FPGA the way Nvidia did because of the cost, which means they need to redesign and fab actual ASICs. This will take a while. I don’t know how upgraded the scalers are in these displays; is there a way to check without taking it apart? I would suspect it is a bit of a hack of existing silicon rather than completely new silicon with upgraded features. Hopefully, they will implement frame multiplication to keep the display within acceptable refresh rate limits in addition to getting the overdrive working flawlessly.
I know you favor IPS Allyn,
I know you favor IPS Allyn, all well and good. My point is the new IPS panels with 144Hz with VRR are the best for overall gaming even twitch shooters. Its just not for every gamer because of the high price. TN should be dead by now and the industry should actually be moving towards frigging OLED by now FFS. I’m just frustrated by it soo much :/
Of course we always want the
Of course we always want the better tech out there, but TN still has a place in low cost panels. That's why I'm excited about this one, as it will get VRR in the hands of more people and make it a much more mainstream tech to have. From this point forward I'd like to see VRR to be a given / commodity thing.
Great point Allyn, I
Great point Allyn, I definitely agree!
AFAIK, OLED can still suffer
AFAIK, OLED can still suffer from burn in and possibly longevity issues. LG may have the longevity issues under control for their expensive TVs, but a computer display has a lot of static content that can easily cause burn in if the display is susceptible to it. Hopefully we will at least get displays with quantum dot enhanced back lighting. These could produce much better color even on a TN based panel.
Allyn quote and facial
Allyn quote and facial expression @ 8:37
“I tried this both ways”
I think this segment of 1080p
I think this segment of 1080p 144 Hz VRR panels will see a lot of market success. As nice as the 1440p panels are, the combined monitor + GPU price is simply too much for the majority of gamers. A GTX 960 (or AMD equivalent) + 1080p 144 Hz VRR panel for ~$500 is much much more reasonable.
It’s even more difficult for someone coming from a 1080p 60Hz TN panel or console gaming on a TV to jump straight into the high end 1440p 144Hz VRR + GPU combo. You can’t see these panels in action in stores. And it’s difficult to predict if you even need VRR, IPS, 144Hz, or 1440p without seeing it in action.
I’m personally waiting until the 2nd round of 3440x1440p IPS curved G-sync monitors come out before I strongly consider making a new monitor purchase. Hopefully a single Pascal GPU will be able to drive AAA games at that resolution by then. Ideally, I’d wait for DP 1.3 to get 144Hz at that resolution. For 3rd person games or RTS/MOBAs ~70-80Hz with G-sync looks great. But a certain upcoming FPS (Overwatch) makes me not want to give up 144Hz. The fast panning in FPS is where 144 Hz really shines.
Wow, that gamma setting!
How
Wow, that gamma setting!
How does that even happen? Sounds like Nixeus couldn’t afford to hire an expert who knows how calibration works, so they just kept pushing higher and higher values in the controller until the panel looked “okay”, then added gamma 2.2 in the options because “er, we don’t know – everyone else says that 2.2 is the right value….”
D:
1080p Not sure people would
1080p Not sure people would “upgarde”from another 1080p monitor.
Though for a first time setup it looks the perfect way to go.
So, do they do a 1440?
I know some people with early
I know some people with early LED backlights that have terrible color reproduction. These would definitely be an upgrade. A lot of people don’t pay much attention to resolution though. When they upgrade, it will probably be just to a larger display at the same resolution. 24″ may not be much of an upgrade for most people Though unless they are using really old displays.
Exactly, everybody that
Exactly, everybody that already games on a pc is on 1080p TN and most that I know will be moving to 1440p IPS 144Hz. No way will they move to another 1080p TN panel again. The VRR won’t matter because they want a big upgrade not a tiny one if you know what I mean.
During your usage did you
During your usage did you happen to notice significant banding? Specially, using lagom’s gradient test but also with steam.
To fix it, the green levels and contrast had to be set exactly. I thought it was a little strange that green would have an effect on banding when the other colors didn’t. Also it had to be tied to contrast levels. IIRC, green had to be set at 73 and contrast at 50. Contrast at 100 with green at 53 also worked.
Any ideas? I’ve tried using different inputs but same result.
We did not notice any when
We did not notice any when calibrated or uncalibrated (and either gamma setting). We only adjusted color far enough to cal properly. I did note that setting the colors >65 did not have a significant change on the output, so I instead moved the other colors down below the default of 70 to achieve the desired balance.
pls review samsung u24e590d
pls review samsung u24e590d
who makes the actual panel
who makes the actual panel this screen is built on?
AUO
AUO
Do you know if they actually
Do you know if they actually are using a totally new scaler chip, or did they manage to get the functionality just by tweaking the firmware or something?
Could you give us the exact
Could you give us the exact model number of the panel. And also the scaler is of interest in order to compare between the other Adaptive Sync monitors. Often it’s listed in the service menu.
EU release when?
EU release when?
What is a Nixeus and why are
What is a Nixeus and why are they selling a low quality display with variable refresh for $500. Is this just a test to see if people will spend an extra $350 for freesync? Or did some executive with a cigar decide to enter dip their toes in the market with a modified version of their crummy display.
Guys need some help with this
Guys need some help with this monitor, got it the other day.
Do I calibrate the OSD with:
“Gamma Off” (2.6) (“Gamma On” not recommended by PCPer)
Brightness: 40
Contrast: 50
Preset: User Define
Red: 70
Green: 63
Blue: 62
And THEN install the ICC profile and enable it?
Because this is what I did, I am not sure if this is correct or not. I’m coming from a 27″ IPS panel with great colours some I’m trying to get the best out of this monitor for regular desktop use and games…games look great on this tho.