Top positive review
56 people found this helpful
Using this as a monitor is great
By MyHonest2Cents on Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2023
NOTE: LG recently released a firmware update to the LG C2 that substantially reduces the ABL auto-dimming! This makes it much more competitive to the PG4*UQ and other OLEDs without opening the service menu to disable those features. I hear a lot of issues people have with using a TV as a monitor, especially this one, but I haven't had any such issues. After setting it up properly, the only problem is the RWBG subpixel layout and having to turn it on along with my computer. But as someone that grew up with CRT monitors, having to press an extra button in addition to the power button is not even the slightest bit inconvenient. The thing that really kills this as a monitor is the subpixel layout. RWBG adds noticeable fringing and bleed on text on OSes calibrated for RGB subpixels. Turning subpixel rendering compensation off makes it tolerable, but it's still much harder to read than on a normal monitor, and some games use it regardless of OS settings with no obvious way to adjust it. For visual content like movies and games it isn't noticeable at all, however. As long as you aren't planning to read a whole bunch, or if you sit further back and make your text bigger so the subpixels don't mess with the text as much, there isn't a single issue with using this as a computer monitor. I originally purchased the PG42UQ and PG48UQ instead, and got 2 dead 42's and one 48 that only survived for a few weeks before it spontaneously died. I'd like to compare some points on the C2 vs PG4*UQ: - The box on the C2 is thicker, the Styrofoam completely protects the screen unlike on the PG4*UQ where there are tons of gaps, the Styrofoam on the corners is also much thicker preventing drops from affecting the corners like what happened to BOTH of my PG42UQs, and the accessories and feet are placed in sane location unlike the strange Styrofoam origami that was both the PG42UQ and PG48UQ. - On both, the panel quality is fantastic. But on the C2, you can really tweak the settings until everything is perfect, especially if you have the service remote or other way to get into the service menu. This TV in particular can easily be color calibrated to make it shine in whatever environment you put it in with 22 point white balance adjustment, gamma curves, and multiple black/white level boosts and compensations. - The glossy screen is a boon as it leaves the blacks completely dark, vs. a matte screen like on the PG4*UQ where there is significant light bleed and blooming. - The C2's panel is much thicker and doesn't feel fragile compared to the dangerously paper-thin, basically unprotected edges on the PG4*UQ - The power button housing on the bottom doesn't bend easily and feel like it's going to snap off like on the PG4*UQ. It's also much thinner and less obnoxious to look at. Man, I hate "gamer" stuff. - In general, the design on the C2 is much more sleek, simple, and modern, allowing it to fit into the room better than the eye-catching "gamer" aesthetic on the PG4*UQ. - Due to the thicker panel backplate and rear cover design, the C2 is easier to lift safely without feeling like you're going to damage it. - All the cable managing on the C2 is in one spot on one side only, instead of top, right, and bottom. - With the right settings in Game Optimizer mode, the C2 can reach the same point-for-point performance metrics as the PG4*UQ, with only the peak brightness not being as good (but that doesn't matter as it dips substantially for both the second a scene starts getting bright, after which the difference is negligible). - The subpixel layout on the PG4*UQ is better for reading text. This is the only praise I have for it over the C2. - The refresh rate can be overclocked on the PG4*UQ to a staggering 138Hz! Wow, how impressive. Unfortunately, the difference visually between 120Hz and 138Hz is basically nonexistent, as someone that has compared the C2 at 120Hz and PG48UQ at 138Hz. The response time is still fantastic on both units regardless of mode. Overall, highly recommend this as both a TV and a monitor. I don't use the smart features and leave it disconnected from the network, and unlike with other smart TV platforms, the C2 doesn't annoy you and simply lets you use it without the smart feature bloat impeding you. And if I want to consume content and use the motion smoothing etc. features, they're there at a press of the button. I don't think all the massive number of problems with the ASUS units make the overclocking or other small extra features worth it; and at the same time, the C2 offers some nice features of its own that the PG4*UQ doesn't have. I would highly recommend it as a multimon replacement as I am, if you're willing to live with the subpixel layout and having to turn the TV on and off separately to the connected PC; do note there is a Windows-only, community-maintained companion app, which I can't use as I don't use Windows.
Top critical review
220 people found this helpful
A phenomenal TV absolutely ruined by software!
By JesseP on Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2023
Let me preface this by saying I spent months researching this TV before I bought it and I'm surprised I never came across anyone who pointed out this major flaw. Does this TV have absolutely phenomenal picture quality for the price? Yes. Is it good for gaming? Yes. It did take some adjusting out of the box to really fine to the picture quality and turn off all the nonsense features that almost every TV comes with but that's to be excepted. However, the problem is with LG and the way they designed the software for this television and choose to run their company. It's not a great UI but that's not my complaint. LG sends out notifications to all these TV's which are essentially just ads. You're buying a TV with a built in ad feature that will display on top of whatever you're watching and no I'm not making this up. The photo I attached is when you go deep into the settings (and I mean deep, it's like 8 clicks). There is a notification log that shows everything they're sending you. They send about 8-10 a day. 99% of them are just ads. When you turn your TV on these appear one at a time in the bottom center of the screen approximately where the closed captions would appear during a movie and they cycle through to the next one after one has displayed for a couple seconds. This means you're getting rapid fire ad blasted every time you turn your TV on. If you look closely at my photo you'll see oh at least one of those in there is for a software/firmware update... No, that's not actually what that is. That's actually a notification letting me know that there will be firmware updates in the future... again I'm not making this up. This is a real company that thinks this is a good idea. I have reached out to customer support 3 times about this issue and they have confirmed each time that there is literally no way to turn this off. I realize that this can simply be fixed by a software update but think about it for a second. Companies don't send out ads for free. Where is the incentive for them to remove this? I don't think there is one. I have to assume must be intentionally designed this way. Maybe you don't care about this problem but for me if I sit down and pop a disc into my PS1 and turn my tv on do you think I want to get blasted with relentless ads while I'm in the boot up cinematic of some game? Take into consideration that if you don't use your TV for a week or month these build up and are all shown to you at once and you have to go in and manually remove them. It's insanity. This was my first LG TV and having done so much research felt it was justified since I heard this was slightly better for gaming and it really does have a great picture quality but this will be the last LG product I ever buy. Stick to Sony or Samsung and you won't regret it.
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