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Microcenter ultrawide
Microcenter ultrawide











microcenter ultrawide

Menu navigation is handled via a collection of four buttons along the bottom side of the monitor bezel - it's functional if not especially intuitive compared to the micro-stick on my LG monitor. The menu system is reasonably robust with options for adjusting response time, enabling Adaptive Sync, adjusting the picture settings and enabling features such as a refresh rate monitor and a crosshair overlay. The included stand allows height and tilt adjustment and is equally understated - just a heavy square slab that complements the monitor's design.

microcenter ultrawide

The rear of the panel is otherwise empty with a 100x100 VESA mount if you prefer to mount your monitors on an arm. The back panel includes multiple inputs tucked up beneath the chassis: a pair of HDMI 2.0 inputs (max 3440x1440 at 100Hz), a DisplayPort 1.4 connector (3440x1440 at 144Hz), a USB-C port which allows video input (max 60Hz) and a 3.5mm audio jack. Image quality, viewing angles and input lag are all solid here. It's a nice-looking monitor that'll look good on just about any desk - well, any desk that can handle its girth, at least. Devoid of the typical ostentatious gaming-oriented elements so common in PC monitors, the 40C1R is restrained with a modest, thin black bezel, a clean rectangular stand and a small lip running along the bottom of the frame housing the controls. Once you unbox the 40C1R, the first thing that stands out is the understated design. The 40C1R is not an OLED display and I'm not a huge fan of LCD technology, so I was skeptical, but I figured I'd see how it stacks up against my own similarly-sized LG 38GN950 monitor and whether it's a suitable choice for PC gamers looking for a sizable panel at a decent price. I first ran into Innocn earlier this year, when I sampled one of their portable OLED monitors - which I felt delivered a nice combination of portability and image quality with all the benefits of OLED technology. You don't pay a premium for this either, with the 40C1R being surprisingly affordable given its titanic proportions: $600 is the list price, with the price dipping to $480 or less during sales. The Innocn 40C1R is a 40-inch ultrawide monitor with an IPS-style panel, AMD Freesync Premium and a 144Hz refresh rate - all standard stuff, right? What makes this monitor unique though is its form factor: the 40C1R is completely flat, making it a tempting alternative for folks that don't appreciate the curved screens endemic amongst modern ultrawides.













Microcenter ultrawide