Grayscale, color fidelity, saturation and gamut to factory settings
What does the customer get who buys an OLED gaming monitor costing about 1,000 euros? First and foremost, an awesome contrast, black gets a completely new meaning – compared to TN, IPS or even VA panels. That means the colors can pop even more than with IPS, since the contrast between the individual colors also comes across better. On the other hand, you should not expect any miracles from this monitor when it comes to professional workflow. It is and remains a content consumption monitor!
Color space coverage
As expected, the customer gets sRGB and DCI-P3 color space coverage, which you can work with if necessary. LG doesn’t care much for Adobe RGB, so there’s only about 90 percent coverage.
Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ Default Setting
I test every monitor in the default settings in terms of white point D65, gamma 2.2 and that in the sRGB color space. The LG 27GR95QE runs in Player 1 mode by default, which is unfortunately not limited to the sRGB color space and the white point is just completely off with 8200K. Thus, the measurements will now – as expected – turn out bad.
Gamut, Gray Scale, Saturation, ColorChecker @ sRGB Mode
LG has fortunately included a usable sRGB mode in the OSD of the 27″ OLED. The values are solid and are easily sufficient for everyday use. The professionals among our readers, who buy their monitors from EIZO for example and calibrate them regularly, will probably laugh about such delta E values. A real color difference can be seen from a delta E > 2.5, so for us “normal people” this is easily enough!
On the next page you can see the comparison to other monitors, brightness etc.. – so please turn the page.
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