276°
Posted 20 hours ago

HUAWEI MateView GT 34'' Ultrawide Curved Gaming Monitor, 165Hz, 21:9 WQHD 3440 x 1440, 3K+, 1500R, Cinema-Level P3 Colour, 1.07 Billion Colours, HDR, TÜV Rheinland, 5-Way Joystick, HDMI, DP, Black

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

Information of the number of pixels in a unit of length. With the decrease of the display size and the increase of its resolution, the pixel density increases.

These monitors are larger and pricier than the Huawei, granted, but another, less expensive favorite, the 2,560x1,440 Razer Raptor 27, covers 162% of the sRGB gamut, and the 32-inch Corsair Xeneon 32QHD165 does even more (194%), though neither monitor gets as bright as the others. Huawei MateView GT review: Performance The maximum number of colors, which the display is able to reproduce, depends on the type of the panel in use and color enhancing technologies like FRC.

Đánh giá & Nhận xét Màn hình cong Huawei MateView GT 34" 2K 165Hz âm thanh nổi

There's no getting away from the fact that pixel response is not this display's strongest point. However, when you're actually in-game, as opposed to forensically inspecting test animations and jiggling windows about looking for issues, it's actually pretty tolerable. Colour accuracy is excellent too with good contrast, as you’d expect from a VA panel. However, viewing angles are not as good as you’ll see on an IPS display but they’re not terrible here either. After a full calibration using my SpyderX Elite colourimeter I was easily able to produce prints that looked identical to what I was seeing on the monitor. And with a solid specification and a price that undercuts much of the competition, the MateView GT makes a solid first impression. But is it one of the best gaming monitors you can buy? Price and availability The MateView GT looks stylish compared to some gaming monitors that scream gamer with RGB lights and red accents everywhere. This isn’t to say there are no RGB lights, in fact, there's an ingenious 180cm light strip that runs along the middle of the 340cm long soundbar. The light show can be turned on or off if you don’t like it in the display software (OSD). Approximate diagonal size of the display. If the manufacturer does not provide such information, the diagonal is calculated from the width and height of the screen.

Don’t look to the Huawei if you’re a gamer, either. The MateView’s extra height means it uses 9.8 million pixels, which is over a million more than a conventional 4K panel. You’ll need a hugely powerful GPU to properly power this panel, and it only has a 60Hz refresh rate and 8ms response time anyway. The MateView GT is a better option there. Size class of the display as declared by the manufacturer. Often this is the rounded value of the actual size of the diagonal in inches. The 3440 x 1440 resolution is solid, too – the density level of 109ppi is crisp enough to make games look great and there’s more vertical space than on a conventional 1080p panel. You also won’t need a ridiculous graphics card to get games running well on the Huawei. It does a decent job when watching videos or even playing games but I still prefer either good headphones or a speaker setup. To all intents and purposes, these are very good results indeed. Games look great on the MateView GT: the spectacular vistas and abundant neon shades of Star Wars Battlefront II are well represented and even positively ancient titles like my current sweetheart, The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion, benefit from the wide aspect ratio and vibrant colours.Given all it offers, the Huawei MateView GT is a compelling creation from one of the world’s leading manufacturers (if not one that always gets a lot of play or respect in the West), and aims to please everyone on one level or another. It comes close to succeeding, with good performance in critical areas, and a lot of the kinds of bells and whistles gamers will appreciate. Underneath all of this you’ll find an IPS panel with 10-bit colour, which is a conventional specification for a premium home and office display.

The 5W speakers are only mediocre, too: muddy and underwhelming. They’re fine for casual YouTube viewing and video calls, but that’s it. At least the MateView has dual microphones. The downside of VA, often enough, is pixel response. Huawei claims 4ms, which is a tad tardy in a gaming context. However, on-paper pixel response specs rarely tell the whole story, so hold that thought. Meanwhile, the MateView's refresh rate tops out at 165Hz. While that's nothing special in this age of 360Hz-plus panels, it's also enough for all but a small fringe of gamers who need the absolute lowest possible latency. The stand and soundbar take up a lot of space on the desk but thankfully, it has a VESA compatible mount so you can use an adjustable monitor arm to keep your desk clear but this also means you’ll lose the soundbar. The stand easily snaps into the monitor and there are no extra wires for the soundbar.The soundbar is, unsurprisingly, a huge step up from typical integrated monitor speakers, offering a lot more volume and vibrant presence that can, if not bust the walls of a standard-size room, at least meet them head-on. That said, it’s not stunning sound. There’s not a great deal of bass — it was detectable in only the flattest of ways listening to The Knife’s “Silent Shout”— and some distortion crept into recordings of soprano vocals when the volume was maxed out. You’re still best served by connecting a dedicated pair of good speakers to your PC or hooking the computer up to your living room’s sound system, but this is a perfectly serviceable solution for gamers who don’t fancy themselves off-hour audiophiles.

They’re not infallible, though. The bass may be punchy, but it does overwhelm the mid-range a little, and the top-end is a tad tinny. These speakers aren’t as good as a proper soundbar, a decent TV, or good external speakers. Huawei’s panel has wireless and Bluetooth connectivity, which delivers handy new functionality. If you’ve got a Huawei smartphone you can mirror its screen on the display using NFC wireless projection. You can wirelessly project your PC’s display to the screen, albeit at lesser resolutions than the panel’s huge native figure. You can connect a keyboard and mouse with Bluetooth and use those to control your PC or laptop, and you can link more Huawei devices together using HarmonyOS. The Samsung M7 might be cheaper than the Huawei, but it does compete on some fronts. It has more smart media and office features, and Samsung’s devices offer similar projection and connectivity options. Samsung’s display is a 4K panel with a conventional 16:9 aspect ratio, so you get fewer pixels, and its plastic casing isn’t as stylish as the metallic MateView. Under the hood, there’s little to choose between the two: both are 60Hz IPS displays. Image quality HUAWEI หน้าจอในที่นี้หมายถึงหน้าจอเป็นสี่เหลี่ยมผืนผ้าทรงมาตรฐาน และขนาดจะวัดตามความยาวของเส้นทแยงมุม (วัดเส้นทแยงมุมตามพื้นผิวหน้าจอ) The high resolution stretches across a 28.2in diagonal, which means images are pin-sharp – the density level of 163ppi means you’ll get crisp and detailed imagery in creative apps and everyday tools.

Thông tin sản phẩm

It’s a solid specification, and the MateView is interesting on the outside: the Huawei’s base contains a soundbar with two 5W speakers. The Huawei has a microphone, too, and a band of touch-sensitive, customisable RGB LEDs across the front of the soundbar adjust the volume. HUAWEI MateView GT ได้รับการรับรองTÜV Rheinland ว่าหน้าจอแสดงผลนี้สามารถลดแสงสีฟ้าและลดการกระพริบของภาพ เงื่อนไขการทดสอบการรับรองการลดแสงสีฟ้า : เมื่อเปิดใช้งานโหมดถนอมสายตา เอฟเฟกต์การแสดงผลจะผ่านการทดสอบแสงสีน้ำเงินต่ำของ TÜV Rheinland (ไม่รวมการปรับอุณหภูมิสี) ผลิตภัณฑ์นี้ไม่ได้มีไว้สำหรับใช้ในทางการแพทย์ You also get gaming features such as crosshairs and three levels of dark field control to brighten shadows in FPS games — great for revealing enemies hiding in dark corners.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment