MSI's Eye-Popping, 49-inch Curved Display Can Be Two Monitors in One

I've always said that you can never, be too rich, too thin or have too much screen real estate, but MSI's new monitor puts that last claim to the test. At 49-inches, the Optix MAG491C provides nearly-gluttonous amount of space for playing high-end games or multitasking. Due out later this year for an estimated price of $999, this curved beauty can even fool your computer into thinking that it's two separate displays.

We had a chance to spend a few minutes playing Project Cars on the Optix MAG491C and were impressed both with the smoothness and just how easy it was to see the full screen without turning our heads. The surface is curved in just the right way so that you benefit from the width while keeping the entire image within your field of view.

The game was extremely smooth, with no ghosting or tearing evident. Perhaps that's because the MAG491C has 144 Hz refresh rate with a three millisecond response time and AMD FreeSync technology. The bright panel promises to reproduce 100 percent of the sRGB color gamut while outputting a luminous 400 nits of brightness.

You might think that a monitor of this size would have a 4K (or even 8K) resolution but the MAG491C has fewer vertical pixels than those standards require. It has the same 3840 horizontal pixels as UHD, but only 1080 vertical dots. That makes the display equivalent to putting two full HD (1920 x 1080) monitors right next to each other.

In fact, the coolest feature of the MAG491C is its ability to enter picture-by-picture mode, where it takes two separate inputs and gives each one half of the screen. So, if you really like the convenience of having dual monitors but don't like seeing an ugly bezel between them, MSI's screen could be your dream come true.

You just run two wires from your PC (or one each from different computers) into the MAG491C and Windows thinks you are connected to two, separate physical monitors. If it were a full 4K (3840 x 2160), each half would be 1920 x 2160, an odd resolution that many computers probably don't support. The MAG491C also supports picture-in-picture mode, which displays a small window with the secondary input rather than giving each input half of the panel.

Oculux NXG251 Has Crazy-High Refresh Rate

If you want the most responsive monitor you can get, you may be more excited about MSI's 25-inch Oculux NXG251. This monitor refreshes at an astounding 240 Hz with an amazing 0.5 millisecond response time. To put that in perspective, most high-speed gaming panels ae running at 144 Hz with a 3 to 5 ms response time.

The NXG251 also supports Nvidia's FreeSync anti-tearing technology. With FreeSync and the high refresh rate, you can run some games at over 200 fps, without any ghosting at all.

Due out later this year, the NXG251 also provides 300 nits of brightness. In our brief time staring at the screen, colors appeared even brighter and more saturated than on the MAG491C.

This story originally appeared on Tom's Hardware.

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Avram Piltch is Tom's Hardware's editor-in-chief. When he's not playing with the latest gadgets at work or putting on VR helmets at trade shows, you'll find him rooting his phone, taking apart his PC or coding plugins. With his technical knowledge and passion for testing, Avram developed many real-world benchmarks, including our laptop battery test.
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