Reply 56300 of 56687, by Ozzuneoj
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- l33t
Tiido wrote on 2025-03-10, 23:09:* The OSD system is cluncky and lacks simple things like image positioning. Whatever is used seems to be from a low end TV and n […]
Shponglefan wrote on 2025-03-10, 22:39:Why, what happened?
* The OSD system is cluncky and lacks simple things like image positioning. Whatever is used seems to be from a low end TV and not something really fitting for a monitor.
* It couldn't display stuff like BIOS boot screens over VGA connection (at least on the computer we were playing with, a Samsung monitor had no issue whatsoever).
* The CVBS inputs were doing stuff like deinterlacing and had absolutely awful image quality. It was also frame-rate converting and did a horrendous job at it. If you absolutely need to see something you can use them but any gaming is better forgotten.
* HDMI input was able to accept the oddball output from my OSSC that was tuned to perfect capture of Mega Drive's analog RGB output, but it was doing very poor frame-rate conversion when 50Hz signal was input.
* Bezel covers few of the edgemost pixels of the panel, i.e Speedsys frame is invisible because of it.
* The panel has pretty slow response time, absolutely unfitting for scrolling games. Sonic on MD turned into a total blurry mess as soon as things started to move.
* Power on/off button is wired the wrong way aroundThe monitor lacked the board with SCART input so I cannot comment on if its inputs were better behaving. I would surely hope so because the rest has was a disappointment to put it mildly.
I did like the swivel and tilting capability and sound wasn't half bad among other monitors with little built in speakers.
Holy cow, sounds like a pretty poor attempt at a retro display. If I paid the prices they're asking and the end product had these limitations I would absolutely not keep it.
The modular inputs and the styling are interesting, but if the display performance is no better than some generic 5:4 office monitor you could get free any day of the week on a local marketplace, what is the point? Maybe it's meant for streamers\youtubers to impress people with it's retro styling?
Seems like people would be much better off just getting an old CRT TV (possibly for free) if you need a low resolution display for consoles or 8bit computers, or grab a cheap OLED monitor when they go on sale in the sub $400 range and hook it up to whatever scalers you need. At least that will be able to handle different refresh rates and with the right input source it has some possibility of mimicking the qualities of a CRT display.
Eventually, things like the Retrotink 4k or Retrotink 4K CE will be a lot more affordable and could potentially turn any modern OLED display into an extremely versatile retro monitor.