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HUAWEI MateView GT 34'' Ultrawide Curved Gaming Monitor, 165Hz, 21:9 WQHD 3440 x 1440, 3K+, 1500R, Cinema-Level P3 Colour, 1.07 Billion Colours, HDR, TÜV Rheinland, 5-Way Joystick, HDMI, DP, Black

£9.9£99Clearance
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Huawei’s panel has wireless and Bluetooth connectivity, which delivers handy new functionality. If you’ve got a Huawei smartphone you can mirror its screen on the display using NFC wireless projection. You can wirelessly project your PC’s display to the screen, albeit at lesser resolutions than the panel’s huge native figure. You can connect a keyboard and mouse with Bluetooth and use those to control your PC or laptop, and you can link more Huawei devices together using HarmonyOS. Approximate diagonal size of the display. If the manufacturer does not provide such information, the diagonal is calculated from the width and height of the screen. Approximate width of the display. If the manufacturer does not provide such information, the width is calculated from the diagonal and the aspect ratio. In this regard, my desktop PC is no slouch with Nvidia GTX 3080 graphics, 32GB of RAM and an Intel i9 CPU but even this isn’t enough to achieve a steady 165 fps in all games at maximum resolution and ultra graphic settings. That being said, in many of the games I played, I was able to achieve 165 fps and over with small tweaks to the graphic options.

The Huawei MateView is the firm’s second monitor, and it’s an eye-catching and interesting bit of kit. Its design wouldn’t look out of place in the Apple Store and it has features that you won’t find on any of its rivals. To all intents and purposes, these are very good results indeed. Games look great on the MateView GT: the spectacular vistas and abundant neon shades of Star Wars Battlefront II are well represented and even positively ancient titles like my current sweetheart, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, benefit from the wide aspect ratio and vibrant colours. It’s a solid specification, and the MateView is interesting on the outside: the Huawei’s base contains a soundbar with two 5W speakers. The Huawei has a microphone, too, and a band of touch-sensitive, customisable RGB LEDs across the front of the soundbar adjust the volume.

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Don’t use the first three modes, though – with those deployed there’s still plenty of blurring. Level four is the highest Overdrive mode on this display, and it’s by far the best. There’s still a bit of blurring, but the ghosting, inverse ghosting and blur remains dark and minimal compared to the other options. That top Overdrive level delivers the crispest, smoothest experience by far. The Huawei has good colours. The Delta E of 1.41 is below the point where human eyes will detect deviations, and the colour temperature of 6318K is excellent. Huawei’s screen rendered 99.2% of the sRGB gamut at 122.7% volume, which means bold, bright colours in mainstream games, and it also displayed 86.9% of the DCI-P3 gamut. That’s a little below Huawei’s claimed 90% figure, but this is not a bad bill of health – only the Cooler Master did better with gamuts, and the Huawei beats both rivals on accuracy. The soundbar is, unsurprisingly, a huge step up from typical integrated monitor speakers, offering a lot more volume and vibrant presence that can, if not bust the walls of a standard-size room, at least meet them head-on. That said, it’s not stunning sound. There’s not a great deal of bass — it was detectable in only the flattest of ways listening to The Knife’s “Silent Shout”— and some distortion crept into recordings of soprano vocals when the volume was maxed out. You’re still best served by connecting a dedicated pair of good speakers to your PC or hooking the computer up to your living room’s sound system, but this is a perfectly serviceable solution for gamers who don’t fancy themselves off-hour audiophiles.

The Huawei’s size, resolution and aspect ratio match its competitors from Cooler Master and MSI. The MateView also uses a 1500R curve, the same radius as the Cooler Master. It’s a solid radius that does a reasonable job of wrapping the panel around the user, but the MSI’s 1000R design was tighter and arguably more immersive. They’re not infallible, though. The bass may be punchy, but it does overwhelm the mid-range a little, and the top-end is a tad tinny. These speakers aren’t as good as a proper soundbar, a decent TV, or good external speakers. Switching over to the sRGB colour profile delivered an improved Delta E of 0.62 and a marginally better colour temperature of 6052K, so that’s worth using if you’d prefer a more realistic image. The MateView also displayed 99.6% of the sRGB gamut at 133.9%, so it’ll serve up every shade required with lashings of vitality. And, happily, these results were maintained at the Huawei’s maximum brightness of 500 nits. That is mighty, and it means the Huawei delivers incredible depth, bold colours and superb nuance and vibrancy. It’s punchy, lively and impressive. It’s better than both rivals here – they had VA technology, too, but neither could match this contrast.The high resolution stretches across a 28.2in diagonal, which means images are pin-sharp – the density level of 163ppi means you’ll get crisp and detailed imagery in creative apps and everyday tools.

While pro gamers will still prefer performance over image fidelity, the MateView GT offers all the bells and whistles you’d want for the rest of us. The flip side of this is that even if you like a lot of what it does, its shortage of aggressive aesthetics and flawless follow-through for everything it attempts may prevent it from being ideal for your gaming setup, even if it is one of the best gaming monitors for some shoppers. But if you need what it has — and if you’re somewhere where you’re able to get your hands on it — it’s worth a look. Huawei MateView GT review: Pricing and availability These monitors are larger and pricier than the Huawei, granted, but another, less expensive favorite, the 2,560x1,440 Razer Raptor 27, covers 162% of the sRGB gamut, and the 32-inch Corsair Xeneon 32QHD165 does even more (194%), though neither monitor gets as bright as the others. Huawei MateView GT review: Performance

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The most widely used panels are those with 6, 8, and 10 bits for each of the RGB components of the pixel. They provide 18-, 24-, and 30-bit color, respectively. The response time is respectable at 4ms but I did notice the slight difference between 4ms and 1ms on my one gaming monitor in some fast-paced FPS games. HUAWEI MateView GT ได้รับการรับรองTÜV Rheinland ว่าหน้าจอแสดงผลนี้สามารถลดแสงสีฟ้าและลดการกระพริบของภาพ เงื่อนไขการทดสอบการรับรองการลดแสงสีฟ้า : เมื่อเปิดใช้งานโหมดถนอมสายตา เอฟเฟกต์การแสดงผลจะผ่านการทดสอบแสงสีน้ำเงินต่ำของ TÜV Rheinland (ไม่รวมการปรับอุณหภูมิสี) ผลิตภัณฑ์นี้ไม่ได้มีไว้สำหรับใช้ในทางการแพทย์ HUAWEI MateView GT (sRGB) ความแม่นยำของสีอาจแตกต่างกันเล็กน้อย ขึ้นอยู่กับระยะเวลาการใช้งานหน้าจอและเครื่องมือทดสอบ เป็นต้น And, for all the MateView’s great looks, don’t expect much adjustment. The Huawei has a middling 110mm of height adjustment and it can tilt, but it has no swivelling, no portrait mode ability and no VESA compatibility.

Don’t look to the Huawei if you’re a gamer, either. The MateView’s extra height means it uses 9.8 million pixels, which is over a million more than a conventional 4K panel. You’ll need a hugely powerful GPU to properly power this panel, and it only has a 60Hz refresh rate and 8ms response time anyway. The MateView GT is a better option there. Overall, the Huawei MateView GT isn’t a slam dunk as a pure gaming panel. The mediocre pixel response sees to that. But as an all-round, do-everything screen that looks great in both image quality and styling terms, it's got a lot going for it, especially when you consider the competitive pricing. Dimensions, weight and color Information about the dimensions and the weight of the specific model with and without stand as well as the colors, in which it is offered to the market. Width It’s a solid panel elsewhere. The stand is a solid slab of metal, the bezels are slim, and build quality is impressive. The MateView is easy to assemble, and it has 110mm of height adjustment and 25-degree of tilt movement. It supports 100mm VESA mounting, too, although doing this will mean you can’t use the soundbar. There’s no swivel movement, either – something which both competitors include. The stand also has no cable-tidying loops or cavities.

The mid-range 165Hz refresh rate combines with a 4ms response time. That’s great on paper, but it’s not as good as the 1ms response times on the Cooler Master and MSI displays, and that means there’s a little unwanted blurring on this panel. It just won’t have much negative impact in lots of gaming situations, and the minor blurring and middling response times are barely noticeable in those big AAA single-player titles, but it’s worth engaging the display’s Overdrive options to get the best experience.

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