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It’ll be fine as your secondary monitor or your main display if you don’t do any colour critical stuff, but if you want your monitor to both be your gaming display and for professional creative work like editing photos and videos, the Prism+ X240 probably won’t be the best option for you. And as for viewing angles, it’s okay for a VA monitor but nothing to shout about. This is even after setting both monitors to max brightness.
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Again comparing to my daily driver monitor, while my LG has a max brightness of 300nits, it looked brighter than the X240. Prism+ claims a brightness of 320nits, and after using it for a bit it really didn’t feel like it. Don’t just take it from me either while using the X240 in the SoyaCincau office, two different colleagues came up to me to check out the monitor and both immediately pointed out the poor colour reproduction on it.Īnother nitpick I have with the X240 is the brightness, or rather the lack of it. Now while I couldn’t objectively measure that, I had it side-by-side to my daily driver LG IPS monitor and there was just no comparison against the two. Faded colours on a dim displayįor a monitor with a supposed 120% sRGB coverage on paper, the X240 looks pretty washed out. All of this for a retail price of RM999, but it’s almost always on sale for RM799, which kinda sounds like a bargain. Prism+ are also claiming a 120% coverage of the sRGB colour gamut, a 320nits brightness and a 3000:1 contrast ratio.
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It has a 24-inch display using a 1200R curved Samsung VA panel, and has a 165Hz refresh rate with a 1ms response time. The Prism+ X240 comes courtesy of the Singaporean brand Prism+, and on paper offers some very solid specs for a good price. I’m telling you guys this mostly because this Prism+ X240 is kinda on the other end of the spectrum here. In fact, the monitor I use on a daily basis is an LG ultrawide that’s actually meant for productivity, because it has excellent colour reproduction, solid brightness and that 21:9 aspect ratio goodness, albeit at just a 75Hz refresh rate. Personally, I’ve always preferred ramping up the graphical settings to the point where it looks as best as possible, even if it means taking a hit on FPS numbers. However, as I did point out in my first impressions of the monitor, I don’t actually care that much about framerate. I’m not sure if I officially hold the title of the ‘office gamer’ just yet, but with 455 games owned on Steam and thousands of hours in Overwatch, I wasn’t too surprised Rory handed me the Prism+ X240 monitor to review.