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i want to buy 1080p monitor but i dont know which one should i buy

i have 720p monitor (18 inch)

i know the biggest resolution we set in game, it will decrease the fps

 

what is the biggest monitor for 1080p?

 

and i want to know

will the 26, 27, and 28 inches make the difference result like decreasing fps or jagged with 24 inch monitor?

 

u know when u set 800 x 600 resolution in 720p monitor it will look jagged and weird

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4 minutes ago, profileisused said:

i want to buy 1080p monitor but i dont know which one should i buy

What's your budget/country

 

what is your CPU/GPU

I edit my posts a lot, Twitter is @LordStreetguru just don't ask PC questions there mostly...
 

Spoiler

 

What is your budget/country for your new PC?

 

what monitor resolution/refresh rate?

 

What games or other software do you need to run?

 

 

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Monitor sizes doesn't have anything to do with gaming performance.

What matters is the resolution you are playing.

1080p is the resolution, it is 1920x1080 pixel, 720p is 1280x720pixel.

The higher the resolution, the better the image.

A 1080p screen has exactly 2.073.600 pixels, or plainly speaking the numbers of LCD dots the screen have.

Where a 4K /UHD screen has 4096 x 2160 pixel or 8.847.360 total pixels, 4 times the density of 1080p.

So it would need 4 times the computing power to produce the same FPS of a 1080p.

 

A 1080p monitor / screen can have many sizes from the smaller smartphone to the huge 50+ inch.

If you game in the 50inch at 1080p resolution it will be the same as gaming in a smartphone sized screen (with the same pc specs).

 

Now talking about DPI (dots per inch), bigger screen will have lower DPI count since the size is bigger, you can almost see the individual dots in jumbo screen with 720p or 1080p. Making it a little more jaggy compared when you use smallers screen.

 

Arguably you will want to use up to 27 inch for 1080p monitor.

Bigger than that you might wanna use the 4k resolution.

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I think that 1080p is best for 24inch. Many people recommend going 1440p for 27inch, but I can't say it myself because I simply don't have 27 inch monitor to check it

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8 minutes ago, profileisused said:

142 usd (about budget, i can ask my parents to add more)

rx 570

You only want a 27" 1080p display if it's sitting pretty far from you, as it's not going to be as sharp, your GPU is fine for 1080p, your CPU will determine how well you can run at 144fps

 

just grab one of the 1080p 144hz free-sync displays


https://pcpartpicker.com/product/HBRzK8/aoc-c24g1-240-1920x1080-144-hz-monitor-c24g1

https://www.displayninja.com/aoc-c24g1-review/

https://pcmonitors.info/reviews/aoc-c24g1/

I edit my posts a lot, Twitter is @LordStreetguru just don't ask PC questions there mostly...
 

Spoiler

 

What is your budget/country for your new PC?

 

what monitor resolution/refresh rate?

 

What games or other software do you need to run?

 

 

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5 minutes ago, xKr1Sx said:

I think that 1080p is best for 24inch. Many people recommend going 1440p for 27inch, but I can't say it myself because I simply don't have 27 inch monitor to check it

For the US 4k 27" displays are near $200, the 1440p 60hz monitor is dead.

I edit my posts a lot, Twitter is @LordStreetguru just don't ask PC questions there mostly...
 

Spoiler

 

What is your budget/country for your new PC?

 

what monitor resolution/refresh rate?

 

What games or other software do you need to run?

 

 

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Like people said above, the actual size of the display doesn't affect performance.

It's just the physical pixel size that changes. The video card still has the process the same amount of pixels, if the monitor size is 24" or 27"

For 1080p (1920x1080), you want monitors between 21.5" and 24". It's possible to go up to 27" but the bigger the physical size, the more noticeable it will be for you - if you stay close to the panel, you will start to see the individual dots and may feel like worse quality to you.

If the physical size is smaller, you have smaller pixels which means higher dpi (dots per inch), so that may force you to use scaling to increase font sizes in windows in order to be able to read the texts.

For 1440p (2560x1440), 24"..30" is recommended.

 

Don't rush to buy a monitor that advertises a high fps, like 144 Hz. I'd make a priority the image quality first.

Cheap monitors that can do high fps will usually use TN panels, which are fast, but the color reproduction isn't great. Also the viewing angles on TN panels are bad: if you're not directly in front of the panel, if you look from the sides, the colors will shift a bit.

You want VA or IPS panel on your monitor, these don't have these problems... colors don't shift and it's higher contrast and better color reproduction.

 

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1 hour ago, Streetguru said:

For the US 4k 27" displays are near $200, the 1440p 60hz monitor is dead.

Yea, I mostly meant 1440p 144Hz. In my country (Poland) the cheapest 4K 27" are around 250-260$, but unfortunately I don't see many 27" 1440p 144Hz. 1080p 27" is more popular than 1440p but it's probably because 1080p is easier to run and cheaper 

CPU: i5-4590 | CPU Cooler: SPC Spartan LT HE922 | MOBO: ASRock H87 Fatal1ty | GPU: Gigabyte R9 280 3GB | RAM: 2x4GB Crucial Ballistix 1600Mhz | SSD: MX500 1TB | Case: SPC Armis AR7X | PSU: XFX TS550W | Custom Cables: Phanteks Extension Kit (White)

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