❌

Reading view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.

Titan Army joins the 1000Hz monitor club with the U275M

Titan Army is stepping into the β€œhyper refresh rate” segment with the U275M, a 27-inch gaming monitor that is part of a new wave of dual-mode displays that trade resolution for hyper-fast refresh rates over 1000Hz.Β 

As noted by Wccftech, at 1060Hz, the U275M currently ranks second-fastest among publicly announced monitors, trailing only the HKC Antgamer, which offers a 1080Hz mode. To support this speed, the monitor uses Dual-Side Backlight Technology and Quantum Dot (QD) film, achieving HDR 600 certification and professional-grade Delta E < 1 colour accuracy.

A refresh rate of 1060Hz is meaningless if the pixel response times can't keep up, leading to β€œghosting” or smeary images. To combat this, Titan Army is introducing Dynamic Display 2.0. This updated motion-clarity system reportedly combines Black Frame Insertion (BFI) with local dimming control to eliminate β€œscreen shaking” and motion blur.

While the U275M can deliver an impressive refresh rate, playing at 720p on a 27-inch screen is a significant hurdle for many. At that resolution and size, pixel density drops to roughly 54 PPI, which can make text and fine details look incredibly blocky.

KitGuru says: Would you be willing to reduce the display resolution to 720p to reach a 1000Hz refresh rate?

The post Titan Army joins the 1000Hz monitor club with the U275M first appeared on KitGuru.

New Windows 11 insider build brings native supports for 1000Hz monitors

Microsoft is preparing its OS for the upcoming wave of 1000Hz monitors with the release of Insider builds 26100.8106 and 26200.8106. This update, documented under the cumulative package KB5079387, quietly removes a long-standing artificial ceiling within the Windows display stack that previously hindered the OS's ability to communicate with ultra-high refresh rate monitors.

While the patch notesΒ mention native support for 1000Hz displays, Blur Busters reports that the internal limit has actually been raised to a staggering 5000Hz. This ensures that Windows remains the primary platform for competitive gaming for years to come, even as panel manufacturers begin to experiment with five-digit refresh rates in laboratory settings.

The timing of this update is particularly relevant, as the industry has begun showing its first few dual-mode monitors with a 1000Hz mode. These panels often trade resolution for raw speed, such as the latest prototypes that can toggle between 4K at 240Hz and 720p at 1000Hz. By updating the stack now, Microsoft is ensuring that when these monitors hit the retail market this year, the OS will correctly report those four-digit refresh rates in the Advanced Display Settings without requiring third-party hacks or specialised drivers.

Besides increasing native refresh rate support, the latest preview builds introduce several refinements that improve the overall user experience. For laptop users, the update enhances power efficiency by allowing USB controllers to enter their lowest power state while the system is in sleep mode, provided a native USB4 monitor connection is in use. There is also an improvement to HDR reliability, specifically targeting monitors that utilise non-standard DisplayID 2.0 blocks, which previously caused inconsistent luminance tracking. Additionally, Microsoft has improved the accuracy of the WMI monitor APIs, allowing displays to report their exact physical screen size more precisely, which helps Windows automate complex multi-monitor scaling configurations.

Discuss on our Facebook page, HERE.

KitGuru says: Contrary to the β€œthe human eye can't see more than 60 fps” myth, the reality is that higher refresh rates drastically reduce persistence blur and input latency. By raising the bar to 5000Hz, Microsoft has effectively future-proofed the Windows for the next several generations of gaming monitors.Β 

The post New Windows 11 insider build brings native supports for 1000Hz monitors first appeared on KitGuru.
❌