Question what wrong with this picture?

Yasser85

Distinguished
Jul 21, 2014
34
1
18,535
twitch.tv
Havn't used my TV for the last 6 years so i decided to move it to my desktop and use it as main monitor for my PC.. but now the image is weird.. specially text... idk if it's brightness or colors or contrast or gamma or what? idk much about any of those too.. ao here's a picture i took with my phone cause i couldn't really describe the problem.

xHuhBex.jpg

oLo8yr0.jpg


all i know about the TV is that it's G Hanz 32 inch 1080p 60Hz
idk if this info is usefull but i'm connecting it using HDMI to my gtx 970 windforce g1 GPU
i also have my other 2 monitors connected and they look good

please help and thank you
 

kanewolf

Titan
Moderator
Havn't used my TV for the last 6 years so i decided to move it to my desktop and use it as main monitor for my PC.. but now the image is weird.. specially text... idk if it's brightness or colors or contrast or gamma or what? idk much about any of those too.. ao here's a picture i took with my phone cause i couldn't really describe the problem.

xHuhBex.jpg

oLo8yr0.jpg


all i know about the TV is that it's G Hanz 32 inch 1080p 60Hz
idk if this info is usefull but i'm connecting it using HDMI to my gtx 970 windforce g1 GPU
i also have my other 2 monitors connected and they look good

please help and thank you
You didn't post a model number. Some G Hanz 32 inch units are actually 768P -- https://www.amazon.eg/-/en/G-Hanz-Inch-Smart-LED-Black/dp/B08Z7J2X1C
What is the model number ?
 
It's kind of hard to tell from those pictures, but maybe the order of its subpixels don't match the cleartype setting for text in Windows? I think changing that would affect the other screens too though.

Unless you are just referring to the sort of "screen door" effect that's visible when viewing pixels up close. On a 32" screen at 1080p resolution, the individual points of light that make up the image are going to be larger, and in turn more noticeable at a standard desktop viewing distance than on a more typical 24" 1080p screen, for example. That's why most computer monitors of that size tend to be something like 1440p or 2160p resolution. As a TV, you would typically be viewing it from further away, and less likely to be reading fine text, making that less perceptible.
 

kanewolf

Titan
Moderator