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Philips Evnia 32M2N8900 240Hz ‘4K’ UHD QD-OLED with USB-C

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OLED is an excellent candidate for a dynamic and engrossing gaming experience, mixing excellent image quality and fluidity. The Philips Evnia 49M2C8900L provides this, focusing on a large pixel-dense screen with high refresh rate. The monitor includes signature Evnia styling, with a marble-effect white and light grey stand base and silver-coloured plastic bottom bezel. Dual-stage bezels are used with slim panel border flush with the rest of the screen plus thin hard plastic outer part. As usual for QD-OLED models there’s an overprovisioning of pixels (‘active area’) between the image and panel border, used for the ‘pixel orbiting’ image retention and burn-in mitigation measure. The OSD (On Screen Display) is controlled by a joystick at the rear of the screen, towards the right side as viewed from the front.

A light aesthetic

A 31.5″ ‘Gen 3’ Samsung QD-OLED (Quantum Dot OLED) panel is used, with 3840 x 2160 (‘4K’ UHD) resolution. As a ‘Gen 3’ panel the subpixel structure has been adjusted (squarer appearance) to reduce fringing. The high pixel density of PPI (~140 PPI) also helps in this respect. The screen surface is glossy with an anti-reflective finish, as typical for QD-OLEDs. A 240Hz refresh rate is supported, alongside Adaptive-Sync and HDMI 2.1 VRR – allowing technologies such as Nvidia ‘G-SYNC Compatible’ and AMD FreeSync to be used, with 48 – 240Hz VRR range plus LFC. This also allows games consoles such as the Xbox Series X and PS5 to run at 120Hz ‘4K’ UHD with VRR. A 1.5m:1 static contrast ratio is specified alongside 178°/178° viewing angles and true 10-bit colour. The monitor is ‘flicker-free’ with 250 cd/m² (1000 cd/m² HDR peak, 3% APL) typical maximum luminance and 99% DCI-P3 (118% Adobe RGB, 147.5% sRGB) colour gamut specified. A factory calibrated sRGB setting is included with specified DeltaE <2. The monitor is VESA DisplayHDR True Black 400 certified, but includes HDR modes focusing on higher brightness peaks as well.

A 0.03ms grey to grey response time is specified – ignore the exact figure, though the technology is known to be exceptionally responsive. ‘Low Input Lag’ is also specified. The rear of the screen includes 3-sided ‘Ambiglow’ LEDs towards the top and side edges, with an additional vertical strip down the middle. This is a relatively powerful RGB LED lighting solution, which can be used as a bias light and can react to what’s being displayed on the screen or sound being played. The stand attaches centrally and can be removed and replaced by an alternative 100 x 100mm VESA compatible solution (adaptor included) if preferred. The stand provided offers tilt, swivel and 130mm (5.12 inches) height adjustment. The ports face downwards and include; AC power input (internal power converter), 2 HDMI 2.1 ports, DP 1.4 (with DSC), USB-C (65W PD, DP Alt Mode, upstream data), 2 USB 3.2 Gen1 ports (one with fast-charging, plus Type-B upstream) and a 3.5mm audio output. KVM is supported for easy peripheral sharing and display switching between 2 systems, with PiP/PbP also supported and 2 x 5W speakers included.

3-sided Ambiglow RGB lighting

Further details can be found on the manufacturer’s website. The monitor has an MSRP ~£1040 with availability from October 2024.

Philips Evnia 32M2N8900