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According to the product page on Samsung's website, it is G-sync compatible, and there is 'Nvidia G-sync' printed on the corner of the base. I am using it with an RTX-4060 and it works fine. One thing I noted is that I couldn't get a good calibration of the monitor unless I turned off adaptive sync in the games menu of the monitor. With this turned on, darker shades of colors and gray tended to be all way too dark. Once adaptive sync was turned off, I got a normal image of the monitor calibration chart and I could distinguish each shade, right down to black. So I leave it turned off and set the refresh rate to 180. By the way, I've read that to use the fastest 180 refresh rate, you need to use the display port input. G-sync compatible just means that Nvidia has tested the monitor and it correctly handled variable refresh rates. It does not mean it has any g-sync hardware in the monitor.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I have a NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB GDDR7 and according to NVIDIA's webpage, it shows the Samsung Odyssey G5 as compatible. HOWEVER, when it is connected to this graphics card in the HP Omen 16L using the supplied DisplayPort cable that came with the monitor, it shows in the NVIDIA App under the System tab that 'G-SYNC NOT available' for this monitor. In addition, there is NO 'enable G-sync' and NO 'Monitor technology' options in the NVIDIA control panel. When I went to look at the help from Samsung, it said that the 'Adaptive Sync' must be set to ON. SO, I am still at a loss as to how to turn this option on.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.No. I have a Nvidia graphics card and I found it is not G-Sync. I use V-sync and works fine, no visible tearing. You might want to check the Nvidia site if you want a G-Sync compatible monitor.
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