1-5 of 5 Answers
The short answer is that some of the new RADEON cards can play games at DUHD 240Hz natively, so long as they aren't too graphically demanding. NVIDIA cards don't use Display Port 2.1, so they cannot surpass 120Hz at DUHD natively. Either way, most games using the native 7680 x 2160 resolution can struggle to get to 120 Hz, even with things like DLSS 3.5 and a 4090. Despite this, the monitor is solid, and a good option if you are looking for a "future-proof" monitor - GPUs will 'grow' into this monitor as they get more powerful down the line.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have read that the current generation of Nvidia graphics cards only have display port 1.4. At full resolution the bandwidth of the display port 1.4 would limit you to 120hz. The AMD 7900 XTX cards have a display port 2.1 so theoretically you can get full resolution at 240hz. My experience is at full resolutions on ultra settings on modern games, you're not going to come close to 240hz. I have been playing RDR2 since I got it and I get about 100 fps on full resolution, freesync on, with HDR and ultra settings. To get to 240hz you'd have to really drop the quality. Translation: I don't think there's a video card on the market yet that can drive this thing to it's fullest potential.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.If you plan on getting this and driving it to 240hz, plan on getting a rtx 5090 when they come out, too.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Only AMD 7000 cards with DP 2.1 can handle full res/refresh rate
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Thank you for your question! To achieve the full resolution and refresh rate supported by the 57" Odyssey Neo G9, the graphics card being used must support DP 2.1 (UHBR 13.5 and above) or HDMI 2.1 (FRL 12Gbps). Actual specifications and support may vary by graphics card. Please refer to your graphics card specifications for more details.
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