Re this post hotukdeals.com/dea…285 which has it on their ebay store for £227.97 (this price is back, after it went over £300 for a while). Direct from their website is slightly cheaper.
Step up to an immersive gaming experience
Take your gaming to a new level of totally immersive, life-like action. The Lenovo™ Y27g Curved Gaming Monitor gives you 27" of panoramic, high-contrast, wide-angle viewing on a unique R1800 curved panel optimized for gaming – the most extreme curve panel available today! NVIDIA® G-SYNC™ display technology synchronizes the refresh rate to the GPU to eliminate screen tearing while minimizing display stutter and input lag. It’s a display that’s designed to up your game.
Immersive Gaming
The 27" R1800 panel features the most extreme curve on any gaming monitor available today. VA technology provides a dramatic 178° / 178° wide-viewing angle.
Smoothest performance
NVIDIA® G-SYNC™ technology with 144 Hz refresh rate eliminates screen tearing, and minimizes display stutter and input lag.
Beauty in form & function
Designed for gaming, but with striking good looks. The Y27g Curved Gaming Monitor includes functional features like headphone hook, traceable scales, audio jack, LTS stand, and VESA® mounting.
Popular Features
27 Inch Screen size 1920 x 1080 Full HD Resolution Ports - HDMI G-Sync 16:9 Aspect Ratio Refresh Rates - 144 Hz Curved screen 4 m/s Response Time
"We accept all major credit and debit cards, including Visa, MasterCard, Switch, Delta, Maestro, Solo and American Express, as well as Amazon payments and Paypal."
£449.99 on the Lenovo website: www3.lenovo.com/gb/…1UK (the illustrations below on the Lenovo website suggest this is also the RAZER edition, Part number: 65C1GAC1UK). Tech Specs
Part Number 65C1GAC1UK EPEAT Silver Max Operating Humidity 80%
Min Operating Humidity 10%
Max Operating Temperature 45 C
Min Operating Temperature 0 C
Other Information Microsoft Window 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Connector HDMI 1.4, DP 1.2
Contrast Ratio 3000:1 Display Type VA Maximum Resolution 1920 x 1080 Monitor Technology TFT Preset Display Modes 4
User Programmable Modes 4 Preset Modes Text 4 Screen Illumination WLED Backlight Viewable Image Size Inches 27
Stand Lift, Tilt, Swivel
Swivel -30 to 30 degree
Tilt -5 to 30 degrees
Video Input HDMI + DP Depth 242 mm Depth (US) 9.53 in Height 563.3 mm Height (US) 22.18 in Weight 6.75 kg Weight (US) 14.9 lbs Width 625 mm Width (US) 24.61 in Warranty Period Three Year
What's in the Box:
Monitor head
Monitor frame stand
DisplayPort cable (1.8m)
USB 3.0 cable (1.8m)
Power adapter 65W
Power cord (1.0m)
CD
Quick setup guide
Safety and warranty card
(If you're new to G-Sync - be aware there should be a 1.8m DisplayPort cable in the box, as mentioned above) Enabling G-SYNC on your Y27g & Y27g RE Monitor: forums.lenovo.com/t5/…649
19 comments
GurtTractor
10 Oct 17#19
The flickering at low frame rates (and in some loading screens, when the framerate stutters) is actually a G-Sync specific issue, you can search "g-sync flicker" and see the posts about many makes of monitor. It's kind of hilarious the number of times in online arguments about Freesync vs G-Sync, people saying how technically superior G-Sync is and how it's a better experience. Then what do I find the moment I move to a G-Sync panel from a low end freesync one? Damn flickering! Now I'm really not that upset as it's not bad in the odd loading screen and for games with stuttery FPS I can just disable G-Sync temporarily, but let it be said here: Freesync is every bit as good as G-Sync!! :P
If you get tearing with G-Sync on, then try to limit your FPS to below the max, i.e. 142. Or enable fast sync in the Nvidia settings.
Overall I am very happy with this monitor, and would definitely recommend it. A proper steal for this price, basically one of the cheapest G-Sync deals ever, and a good panel, size, and build quality.
One of the reviews mentioned how terrible the overdrive setting is, the "Extreme" setting is really bad yes. but the normal setting that is enabled out of the box is great IMO Very minimal or no discernable artifacts, and keeps the brightness and clarity of details in motion. With it off entirely things get a bit smeary.
louiselouise
10 Oct 17#17
Better pictures of this monitor, at the bottom of the page, from this review, added most of them!: techaeris.com/201…or/ This doesn't appear to be the Razer version, but will give you a good idea what to expect nonetheless:
I'm a bit confused with the 144htz, 4k, G- sync & Free sync which is better and why?
I have a fairly fast enough system & the iiyama Prolite GE2488HS monitor that i'm using seems to be doing the job Win 10 pro I5 6600k Asus pro mobo 512gb m.2 SSD 16gb DDR 3 Ram 2800mhz Evga 1080ti
adam0812 to buckiebull
10 Oct 17#18
I have a similar system with a dual monitor setup, one screen is 1440p 144hz and gsync, the other is 4k 60hz with no gsync. For gaming I would advise a 1440p 144hz gsync screen, it will compliment your GPU wonderfully. You will get a crisper image from the higher resolution, smoother gamplay from the higher refresh rate and no stuttering or screen tearing from gsync. Gsync is what nvidia cards use, like yours, freesync is amd. A good monitor is expensive, expect to pay £500+ for one with the specs I mentioned, but frankly your PC is being wasted on your current monitor.
CHAOSEN3
10 Oct 17#7
A shame it's 1080p and not 1440p, but 219.93 for g-sync is surely a steal.
canihavealogin
10 Oct 17#6
Thanks for sharing, I have just ordered one so we'll see how it is. The reviews aren't great for it but mostly they reference a poor menu structure (I don't mind, I don't often play with the settings once a screen is set up) and the price which was £600 when it was first released. Seeing as the closest screen from the same shop is over £300 this could be a cracking little bargain.
It's obviously not going to out perform the true high end IPS screens and G-Sync does seem to be an issue (Some say that recent drivers are improving the situation), for this price it seems like a steal.
Gentle_Giant
10 Oct 17#5
Even if you have to switch GSync off, this is still a lot of screen for the money, I have a similar spec Acer and it cost 50% more than this, VA screens are rare, and a great compromise between the speed of a TA screen and the lush picture of an IPS.
I get flicker on mine, but only in certain games, and even that has been reduced to almost nothing after a recent display driver update.
ritchiedrama
10 Oct 17#2
louise, you bloody love games you do.
edit: the main thing seems to be the gsync flickers a lot on this panel at certain points.
Yeah it is discussed there, shows it is present and the mod or whoever that replied is wrong, sadly. It's present even at high frames, it seems to be a common issue with this monitor. My Gsync monitor doesn't get that at any fps.
According to windowscentral.com/bes…ors "...the Lenovo Y27G Razer Edition. The display is available for $50 less without the Razer branding and added benefits, but we wanted to include something a little different here. The Razer Edition of the Y27G includes Chroma multicolor lighting effects that create an ambience depending on what's displayed on-screen (in supported games only).
You can also set the color to your own preference. Say you have a blue lighting theme going on inside the case and wish for the same hue to be projected around the gaming den. This is possible with the Y27G Razer Edition, which makes it an interesting purchase to consider."
"VESA mounting is standard, which makes us happy bunnies and for
connectivity Lenovo has included four USB ports, DisplayPort and HDMI.
The resolution is 1080p, refresh rate is 144Hz, though you may find
issue with the rather slow 8ms response time**. That said, when you
consider the $599.99 price tag, it's not that bad when it comes to value
with G-Sync."
Assuming the 65C1GAC1UK is the Razer Edition, as the Lenovo website suggests.
Opening post
Step up to an immersive gaming experience
Take your gaming to a new level of totally immersive, life-like action. The Lenovo™ Y27g Curved Gaming Monitor gives you 27" of panoramic, high-contrast, wide-angle viewing on a unique R1800 curved panel optimized for gaming – the most extreme curve panel available today! NVIDIA® G-SYNC™ display technology synchronizes the refresh rate to the GPU to eliminate screen tearing while minimizing display stutter and input lag. It’s a display that’s designed to up your game.
Immersive Gaming
The 27" R1800 panel features the most extreme curve on any gaming monitor available today. VA technology provides a dramatic 178° / 178° wide-viewing angle.
Smoothest performance
NVIDIA® G-SYNC™ technology with 144 Hz refresh rate eliminates screen tearing, and minimizes display stutter and input lag.
Beauty in form & function
Designed for gaming, but with striking good looks. The Y27g Curved Gaming Monitor includes functional features like headphone hook, traceable scales, audio jack, LTS stand, and VESA® mounting.
Popular Features
27 Inch Screen size
1920 x 1080 Full HD Resolution
Ports - HDMI
G-Sync
16:9 Aspect Ratio
Refresh Rates - 144 Hz
Curved screen
4 m/s Response Time
"We accept all major credit and debit cards, including Visa, MasterCard, Switch, Delta, Maestro, Solo and American Express, as well as Amazon payments and Paypal."
£449.99 on the Lenovo website: www3.lenovo.com/gb/…1UK
(the illustrations below on the Lenovo website suggest this is also the RAZER edition, Part number: 65C1GAC1UK).
Part Number 65C1GAC1UK
EPEAT Silver
Max Operating Humidity 80%
Min Operating Humidity 10%
Max Operating Temperature 45 C
Min Operating Temperature 0 C
Other Information Microsoft Window 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Connector HDMI 1.4, DP 1.2
Contrast Ratio 3000:1
Display Type VA
Maximum Resolution 1920 x 1080
Monitor Technology TFT
Preset Display Modes 4
User Programmable Modes 4
Preset Modes Text 4
Screen Illumination WLED Backlight
Viewable Image Size Inches 27
Stand Lift, Tilt, Swivel
Swivel -30 to 30 degree
Tilt -5 to 30 degrees
Video Input HDMI + DP
Depth 242 mm
Depth (US) 9.53 in
Height 563.3 mm
Height (US) 22.18 in
Weight 6.75 kg
Weight (US) 14.9 lbs
Width 625 mm
Width (US) 24.61 in
Warranty Period Three Year
What's in the Box:
(If you're new to G-Sync - be aware there should be a 1.8m DisplayPort cable in the box, as mentioned above)
Enabling G-SYNC on your Y27g & Y27g RE Monitor:
forums.lenovo.com/t5/…649
19 comments
If you get tearing with G-Sync on, then try to limit your FPS to below the max, i.e. 142. Or enable fast sync in the Nvidia settings.
Overall I am very happy with this monitor, and would definitely recommend it. A proper steal for this price, basically one of the cheapest G-Sync deals ever, and a good panel, size, and build quality.
One of the reviews mentioned how terrible the overdrive setting is, the "Extreme" setting is really bad yes. but the normal setting that is enabled out of the box is great IMO Very minimal or no discernable artifacts, and keeps the brightness and clarity of details in motion. With it off entirely things get a bit smeary.
This doesn't appear to be the Razer version, but will give you a good idea what to expect nonetheless:
You need to have Lenovo Artery and Razer Synapse Software (and Razer gear) to control the lights.
that's what g-sync, freesync for.
I have a fairly fast enough system & the iiyama Prolite GE2488HS monitor that i'm using seems to be doing the job
Win 10 pro
I5 6600k
Asus pro mobo
512gb m.2 SSD
16gb DDR 3 Ram 2800mhz
Evga 1080ti
It's obviously not going to out perform the true high end IPS screens and G-Sync does seem to be an issue (Some say that recent drivers are improving the situation), for this price it seems like a steal.
I get flicker on mine, but only in certain games, and even that has been reduced to almost nothing after a recent display driver update.
edit: the main thing seems to be the gsync flickers a lot on this panel at certain points.
monitornerds.com/len…ew/
tomsguide.com/us/…tml
techradar.com/rev…tor
According to windowscentral.com/bes…ors "...the Lenovo Y27G Razer Edition. The display is available for $50 less without the Razer branding and added benefits, but we wanted to include something a little different here. The Razer Edition of the Y27G includes Chroma multicolor lighting effects that create an ambience depending on what's displayed on-screen (in supported games only).
You can also set the color to your own preference. Say you have a blue lighting theme going on inside the case and wish for the same hue to be projected around the gaming den. This is possible with the Y27G Razer Edition, which makes it an interesting purchase to consider."
"VESA mounting is standard, which makes us happy bunnies and for connectivity Lenovo has included four USB ports, DisplayPort and HDMI. The resolution is 1080p, refresh rate is 144Hz, though you may find issue with the rather slow 8ms response time**. That said, when you consider the $599.99 price tag, it's not that bad when it comes to value with G-Sync."
Assuming the 65C1GAC1UK is the Razer Edition, as the Lenovo website suggests.
Amazon dot com reviews: amazon.com/Len…ews
**Says 4ms response time on the Laptopdirect website, and on a few Amazon dot com reviews?
Better pictures of this monitor, at the bottom of the page, from this review: techaeris.com/201…or/
But for £209? That's actually an incredible bargain if you dont mind 1080p still.