Galdelico wrote:Ideally, if you told me 'look, I've tested the OSSC with this XYZ 27" monitor, it's fully compatible, it works great, and it's under 500 euros', I'd buy it right now.
Knowing about the compatibility of a display with most signals we could get through the OSSC is almost impossible, all we know it that monitors in general are quite a bit more tolerant than TVs.
-> About TVs note that
videogamesperfection, the official reseller of the OSSC are holding a list of compatible sets on their forums.
Save from the 27MB85R which sometimes sells over 500 I believe all the monitors I've mentioned so far (three 1080 and three 1440) all fit the performance and sub-500€ price requirements.
NCX's list is longer than mine but it includes high-grade gaming monitors over 500 (and overkill for your needs) plus Korean monitors that can be very nice but basically a gamble purchase since they're mostly sold on eBay or niche import mini-stores without any real warranty or returns possibility.
The number of monitors fitting for the job isn't enormous, good ones from each category of resolution (1080, 1200, 1440, 2160) and specialty (like Gsync) narrow down only 3~5 models each and at best.
And that's also because of your tate-ing requirements. You've seen there's a trend for sleek design that even excludes VESA holes, take the upcoming Dell S2718S, I'm sure it will be an excellent glossy 1440 monitor, but it lacks both rotation and VESA.
You could expand your research towards VA monitors (and not rule out the 32" size maybe) because I believe the modern ones are overall fast-enough for most console-gaming, and they're much less trouble when it comes to light bleed = safer purchase.
In any case it's tough being a shmupper when you need a flat panel, more than once when up for a new one I have researched for several months before making a choice.
Also remember whatever the case there will be a better monitor out in not so long, maybe a year, maybe two...maybe next month!
I have a policy that is unless I judge a display near-perfect for my needs, I won't spend over 300~400€. The day I spend over 500 on one, it better be without a doubt awesome. And you know, that almost never happens.
Galdelico wrote:I don't plan to upgrade in one or two years, either. I did research for more than a month now, and I was gonna blow my money on something crappy.
So yeah, all that said, even with PM, if you believe you can help me to finalize my purchase within that budget, I'd hugely appreciate (and I promise to get back and post actual pictures!

). ^_-
What I can do for you is give you general guidelines, what you're looking for is;
- good viewing angles (fitting for tate) which means IPS or VA. -> all manufacturer variants are detailed on pcmonitors and tftcentral articles
- 60Hz since you don't have plans for PC gaming, but if you plan to play PAL games with your OSSC you'll have to confirm the monitor can handle enough 50Hz resolutions too. read the specs/manual. always do.
- good pixel response times, deemed good by a decent reviewer at least (often meaning good overdrive with at least one balanced setting without significant overshoot artifacts)
- low input lag (under 1 frame which means under 16 miliseconds) ->
not to be confused with response time
- 1080p, 1440p or even 4K (some 4K are kind of affordable actually but under 500 is tough)
- PWM-free or 'flicker-free/safe' (althouth PWM is mostly gone nowadays it's best to make sure, because PWM is bad for motion clarity and visual comfort)
- included rotating stand or at least VESA compliant
That's the minimum you need, sorry I can't provide you with a "absolutely buy that one" button, the rest is up to you but don't hesitate to come back for more opinions about any model.
Also you'll see if they decide to pop up, I'm not the only flat panels-savvy person here, this community has quite a lot of no-BS people with long experience in many fields.
