As with the other models in the nine Odyssey series, 90-degree rotation is also possible. On the other hand, the brightness of the display, which can be adjusted in height and tilt, is only 300 cd/m², with a viewing angle of 178 degrees. The G70A marks the top-of-the-line model with a 4K IPS display and HDMI 2.1.
ODYSSEY G7 G70A SERIES
Exciting: The HDMI 2.1 standard is supported, which makes the Samsung Odyssey G7 G70A an interesting monitor for use with the next-gen consoles PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X – 4K resolution with 120 FPS is thus also possible on the consoles. HDR 400 is supported as well as AMD Freesync Premium Pro, and the G7 is also compatible with Nvidia G Sync.īesides Displayport, the gaming monitor relies on two HDMI ports and a USB-A hub. The top model goes by the name G7 G70A and relies on the rare combination of 4K IPS panel, 144 Hz and a 28-inch screen diagonal. The built-in IPS panel clocks at 165 Hz, while the resolution is 2560×1550 pixels, and it is also much brighter at 350 cd/m² – a pivot function is also built in here, while the G50A can be connected with Displayport or HDMI. The G5 G50A is positioned in the mid-range with a screen diagonal of 27 inches. Models with 24 or 27 inches are available, which do not differ from each other except for the display size. The monitor comes with a height-adjustable and swiveling stand including pivot function – so it is possible to rotate the display by 90 degrees. The resolution is 1920×1080 pixels at a frame rate of 144 Hz, with a brightness of 250 cd/m². Odyssey G70A 28 16:9 144 Hz 4K G-Sync IPS Gaming Monitor from Samsung. The G30A represents the entry-level model here, which relies on a more affordable VA panel. Buy Samsung Odyssey G7 S28AG70 is the first 4k monitor in Samsungs Odyssey. The G5 G50A and G3 G30A round out the lineup. With the Odyssey G7 G70A, you can even expect a 4K IPS monitor with a frame rate of 144 Hz and a size of 28 inches. Click here for more information.With the new edition of the Odyssey series, Samsung has introduced fresh gaming monitors that do without a curved display. Credit is provided by Latitude Finance Australia (ABN 42 008 583 588), Australian Credit Licence number 392145. There are higher resolution panels and there are larger panels, but 27-inch and 1440p remains the. Other conditions, fees and charges apply, see relevant product websites for details. The G7’s core proposition involves a 27-inch 1440p VA panel with a super-tight 1000R curve. Also available to CreditLine, GO MasterCard and Buyer’s Edge customers. Samsung Finance is provided under the Gem Visa Conditions of Use (as applicable), which specify all other conditions for this offer. At the end of the plan, interest will be charged at 24.99%. Paying only the minimum monthly payment will not pay out the purchase before the end of the plan.
ODYSSEY G7 G70A FREE
Interest and payments are payable after the interest free period expires. Monthly payments must be made during the promotional period. ^^ Samsung Finance is for approved customers only. Advertised amount subject to approval by Afterpay. ^ Afterpay allows you to pay for your purchase over 4 instalments due every 2 weeks. * Key feature may different from Key Spec
ODYSSEY G7 G70A UPDATE
The reason for this review is that I hope there could be a firmware update pushed to unlock those colour settings with G-Sync-C and V-Sync turned on in Control Panel, I see no ghosting or lag with hardware that cant really game at 4k. everything is amazing whether its watching Videos or Gaming.
Gaming, the colours are fine but day to day desktop use while doing assignments on mostly white backgrounds, Its hard to ignore the differences to the second monitor.Īpart from colour settings. The G7 produces yellowish whites and no matter what i do. It targets a different buyer but it is a gaming monitor so my issue is why can I control or adjust gain, hue, offset and saturation to the degree in that cheap monitor (its not just RGB values.) and cant in the G7 which is much more premium?! The reason i mention the second monitor (which I plan to replace) is the OSD setting and the accuracy of the whites. (Comparing with my second monitor i run next to it at 144hz to match the refresh rates - its a 27" 1440P Monitor shares some of the same specs as the G7 apart from Local Dimming, Resolution and Maximum refresh rate) Just waiting for another sale to get the second to match the looks and avoid colour differences. But the OSD is lacky Bought mine when there was a sale.