XODUSLol uh ohhh move over everyone. We've got a l33t gamer here guys! Give me a break. I would love to see you discern the difference between 3ms and 6ms in any sort of scientific setting. It would be quite hilarious.
XODUSyou would think such a leet gamer would know there's a difference between grey to grey response times, which is an almost useless metric, and input lag which is the main driving factor in the difference in responsiveness between monitors...
But nope, guess you slept through that lesson in leet gaming class.
Stay in school, Jr. One day you will actually surround yourself with things that actually matter for the best possible gaming experience.
XODUSYeah, I'm most certainly not. But if that's what you need to believe to make yourself think you "won" this argument then all the power to ya.
But if you're interested in reality in any way , I game on both an ultrawide 3440x1440 100hz gsync and a 1080p 165hz monitor and when I'm playing competitive anything below 120 fps I will start to see myself make errors that I otherwise would not.
Oh and I also just bought the monitor we are commenting on.. so it would be sort of retarded to buy a monitor with a technology I didn't think made a difference now would it.
Anyway it's obvious to me you don't really know what you're talking about , you just hear some buzzwords and then are gullible enough to believe you actually need it. I suggest in the future maybe just doing some research though, and read up on just why response times they put on the box is almost meaningless. Especially since it's not a regulated standard, and most companies use grey to grey which is useless and some use black to white which is a little more useful, but companies can and almost always exaggerate or flat out lie about the response times.
So now that you've been taken to school young buck, do you feel a little dumb for trying to choose your monitor by a useless metric ?
I suggest using tftcentral for your monitor reviews from now on. They actually test input lag and responsiveness in a controlled scientific setting.