![]() ![]() When MSI showed this screen off at trade shows earlier this year, that camera was the basis of a number of so-called AI features including facial recognition for jumping between OSD menu presets. It also means the MSI Optix MPG341CQR is capable of 400 nits brightness, which is punchy by conventional terms but nowhere near the 600 or 1,000 nits produced by what we would class as true HDR displays.Įlsewhere, you get excellent connectivity in the form of DisplayPort, HDMI and USB-C interfaces. MSI has also fitted the Optix MPG341CQR with a camera in its lower bezel. It’s the very lowest level of HDR support and doesn’t include local dimming. ![]() The final really significant feature from an image quality perspective is HDR400 certification. There’s also adaptive sync support in FreeSync 2 rather than Nvidia G-Sync form. Resolution-wise, we’re talking 3,440 by 1,440 pixels, which is the current norm for this class of 21:9 aspect monitor. This monitor is rated at 3:000:1 for static contrast, far better than any IPS screen can achieve. Most of the competition in this segment goes with IPS panel tech, but VA tech does have one very clear advantage, namely static contrast. It’s rated at 1ms, but pixel response hasn’t always been a VA strong point. That’s pretty nippy for a VA panel, which raises questions about this monitor’s pixel response. More conventionally, the MPG341CQR’s core feature set begins with a 34-inch VA panel that boasts both an 1800R curve and 144Hz refresh.
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