

Coupled with the lag test results and the G-Sync and Free-sync Premium Pro, this gives you a monitor that performed superbly during our tests with no ghosting or screen tearing. The Odyssey has an excellent 1ms response time which is about the lowest you will find on most gaming monitors.
#SAMSUNG ODYSSEY G7 32 INCH MOVIE#
Unfortunately, there is no way of saving monitor settings to different configurations, such as gaming, movie or CAD for example. When you alter any settings, the picture mode is changed to custom.
#SAMSUNG ODYSSEY G7 32 INCH UPDATE#
Along with numerous other settings, you can also update the monitor's firmware via a USB stick. Not sure why you would want anything other than static, but each to their own. You can also change the lighting effect from static, rainbow, flash and breathing. Within the System menu you can configure the RGB lighting to front and back, back only or off altogether. The Picture menu has settings for the picture mode and the brightness, contrast, sharpness and various other controls such as colour tone, gamma and the RGB saturation levels, plus access to the calibration report. If you do that, the monitor goes into Game mode and some of the settings are unavailable. Within the Game menu, you have settings for refresh rate, black equalizer, response time and turning the adaptive-sync on. Read on to see how It performs in our review…. Together with the curviest curve you will find on a monitor. Available for around £630, this 32” curved monitor looks to offer a superb specification for the price with 1440P resolution, 240Hz refresh rate, G-Sync and Free-sync Premium Pro, Quantum Dot Technology, HDR 600 and 1ms response time. Our review today is a slightly more affordable Samsung Odyssey G7. These wallet busting 4K all singing and dancing monitors offer the best currently available, but the price puts them out of reach of most PC gamers. We’ve reviewed plenty of gaming monitors on AVForums, with the majority tending to be at the very high end, including our most recent one, the Acer ConceptD, which was just 1p shy of £2000. For the best gaming experience, you really want those four to be top notch.

These are the mouse, keyboard, headset and the monitor.

As a PC gamer, aside from the PC itself, there are four components that you really shouldn’t skimp on if you want to be part of the master race.
