Samsung on Friday announced the C49HG90 monitor, their new flagship gaming monitor that includes virtually all of the major gaming-oriented display technologies available today. The new 49” screen has a an ultra-wide 32:9 aspect ratio, a 144 Hz refresh rate, and uses quantum dot nanocrystals to enable support for DCI-P3 color gamut, and, perhaps most importantly, it supports AMD’s forthcoming FreeSync 2 technology. In addition, Samsung introduced its CHG70-series displays that will support the same technologies, but will be smaller and more affordable.

The Samsung C49HG90 is the company’s first ultra-wide display with the 32:9 aspect ratio and the so-called double full HD (DFHD) resolution (3840×1080). The monitor is based on a VA panel with up to 600 nits brightness, 1 ms moving picture response time (MPRT) as well as a 144 Hz refresh rate, two features important for fast-moving games. The panel has 1800R curvature along with 178° viewing angles to make gaming experience more immersive. The smaller C32HG70 and C27HG70 monitors use 32” and 27” curved VA panels (respectively) with a 2560×1440 resolution as well as the same refresh rate and MPRT as on the flagship model.

Large dimensions, curvature and a high refresh rate are not the only distinctive features of Samsung’s new breed of gaming displays. The C49HG90 features LED backlighting enhanced with quantum dots that enable support for the DCI-P3 color space (as well as larger-than-sRGB gamut) and the HDR-focused AMD’s FreeSync 2. Samsung claims that the QLED backlighting of the display is similar to that used in its high-end UHDTVs with HDR, but does not say anything about features like local dimming or formal support for the HDR10 spec. Keeping in mind that Samsung’s announcement is focused around games and FreeSync 2 (and the latter uses its own HDR transport) the status of the HDR10 support isn't known at this time.

Meanwhile, Samsung’s HDR implementation makes the CHG70- and the CHG90-series displays the first to support AMD’s FreeSync 2, which is something bigger than just a new dynamic refresh rate technology (as discussed in the appropriate article). The FreeSync 2 mandates support for Low Framerate Compensation – an optional feature for FreeSync 1 monitors – but the biggest shift from a feature perspective is how HDR works. Rather than double-tone mapping the dynamic range – tone mapping a game once from its rendering space to HDR10's space, and then again in the monitor from HDR10 to the monitor's native space – FreeSync 2 skips the middle-man by having games tone map directly to a monitor's native dynamic range. This saves potentially precious milliseconds both by removing a step, and by putting the extremely fast GPU in charge of the process instead of the historically inconsistent display processors inside monitors.

As this is the first FreeSync 2-related news to hit the scene in nearly 5 months, there are some remaining questions that at least as of Samsung's announcement have not yet been answered. Chiefly, when AMD will enable FreeSync 2 support on their end, as all of the heavy lifting is being done by AMD's drivers. Coupled with that is a need for FreeSync 2-enabled software – since devs need to code for it – so that there's something to use with the display. Samsung says that it had collaborated with DICE and Ghost Games to enable HDR in the upcoming Star Wars Battlefront II and Need for Speed Payback games, which may indicate that these two titles will be among the first to support AMD’s FreeSync 2.

Samsung CHG70 and CHG90 QLED Gaming Monitors with AMD FreeSync 2
  C49HG90
LC49HG90DMNXZA
C32HG70 C27HG70
Panel 49" VA 31.5" VA 27" VA
Native Resolution 3840 × 1080 2560 × 1440
Maximum Refresh Rate 144 Hz
Response Time 1 ms MPRT
Brightness 600 cd/m²
Contrast 3000:1 (typical)
2400:1 (minimal)
Backlighting LED w/Quantum Dots
Viewing Angles 178°/178° horizontal/vertical
Curvature 1800R
Aspect Ratio 32:9 (3.56:1) 16:9
Color Gamut 95% DCI-P3
Dynamic Refresh Rate Tech AMD FreeSync 2
Pixel Pitch 0.312 mm² 0.2767 mm² 0.2335 mm²
Pixel Density 81.41 PPI 91.79 PPI 108.8 PPI
Inputs 1 × DP
1 × mDP
2 × HDMI
1 × DP
2 × HDMI
Audio 3.5 mm input and output
USB Hub 2 × USB 3.0 Type-A connectors
1 × USB 3.0 Type-B input
MSRP $1499 $699 $599

Samsung plans to demonstrate its CHG70- and the CHG90-series monitors in action at the Ubisoft booth at the E3 convention this week, just a couple of weeks before the devices will hit the market. This in turn implies that this Ubisoft is also set to support AMD’s FreeSync 2 (good news for the GPU developer) in at least some of its titles, but this is a speculation for now.

While the C27HG70 and C32HG70 look like rather regular gaming displays with a high refresh rate and FreeSync 2, HDR and DCI-P3 support as important bonuses, the C49HG90 seems like an experimental model that will compete against multi-monitor setups. Consumer displays with the 21:9 aspect ratio have been available for several years now and are gaining traction, but so far, no monitor manufacturer has attempted to offer a very large monitor with the 32:9 aspect ratio and a relatively low DPI. People buying the C49HG90 will not be able to watch 4K content on them in native resolution and that may stop some gamers from adopting it. On the other hand, those who use multi-display setups for ultra-wide screen gaming today do not necessarily enjoy 4K video anyway.

The Samsung C49HG90 will be available in late June at a price of $1499. The monitor is now available for pre-order at Amazon and Micro Center in the U.S. The 32” C32HG70 will cost $699 and is available for pre-order at Newegg, whereas the 27” C27HG70 will be priced at $599 and can be pre-ordered from Samsung now.

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Source: Samsung

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  • seamonkey79 - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    Have the prices for the 27" and 32" reversed in either the text or the table, threw me off
  • DanNeely - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    Typo. In the linked press release the 32" one is $699 and the 27" $599 as would normally be expected.
  • SunnyNW - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    Can someone please explain the difference between grey-to-grey (GTG) response time and the "1 ms moving picture response time (MPRT)" that is mentioned in the article.
  • nathanddrews - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    Everything you never wanted to know:

    http://informationdisplay.org/IDArchive/2005/Octob...
  • R3MF - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    "Keeping in mind that Samsung’s announcement is focused around games and FreeSync 2 (and the latter uses its own HDR transport) the status of the HDR10 support isn't known at this time."

    If AMD Freesynce2 HDR isn't using the open HDR10 standard then I want to know about it, anandtech!

    Since these are also premium priced Samsung monitors, I very much want to know if they support HDR10+, i.e. the new HDR10 open standard that includes dynamic metadata (like dolbyvision).
  • r3loaded - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    If my understanding of the FreeSync 2 HDR pipeline is correct, HDR10 support should be as simple as implementing it as a front-end in the driver and letting the rest of the pipeline do the tone-mapping to the display's native colour space. Let's just say I have more faith in AMD doing this than a display manufacturer.
  • Xajel - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    FreeSync 2 does not require any current HDR standards ( HDR10, HDR10+ or Dolby Vision ), I think it's just a way insure fair base prices, but in the same time allowing for more advanced panels.. sure I would love to see a standard being supported, being blind like this means we don't know how serious the HDR implementation is.
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, June 12, 2017 - link

    "If AMD Freesynce2 HDR isn't using the open HDR10 standard then I want to know about it, anandtech!"

    FreeSync2 has its own HDR Transport standard. So it is possible to have a monitor that supports FS2, but not one of the common standards. Though unlikely, as you would want a fallback for games that don't support FreeSync 2's HDR.
  • R3MF - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    interesting, Ryan. thank you.

    as Samsung products, it would be interesting to see if these fallback methods include HDR10+ which are used in 2017 TV's, and being backported to 2016 TV firmware.
  • bcronce - Tuesday, June 13, 2017 - link

    It would be nice to know an exact answer, but my understanding is HDR10/Dolby are standards, while FreeSync is about forgoing standards and outputing directly to native so the monitor does not need to reconvert from the standard.

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