Display Analysis

Gaming laptops are the one holdout for TN display panels, since they are easier to drive at high refresh rates. But with this current generation of gaming laptops we’ve finally got a glimpse at high-refresh IPS, and it is glorious. Coupled with G-SYNC, the Acer Predator Triton 500 offers both high refresh rates and variable refresh, all without the TN compromise of poor viewing angles and generally worse color reproduction. That’s not to say all gaming laptops with TN displays were inferior, because some of them had very good quality TN displays, but TN just can’t match IPS in these areas.

The matte coating makes the pixels blurry

If you’ve not had a chance to game on a high-refresh G-SYNC display, you are really missing out. Everything is so smooth. 60 Hz works fine for desktop applications, but when gaming the difference between 60 Hz and the 144 Hz of this panel is a huge transformation. Acer is, of course, not the only manufacturer to offer this display, but it is definitely a winner for this demographic.

Color accuracy is something we always hope for, but gaming laptops haven’t ever proven themselves caring in this regard, with perhaps the exception of Razer who has done some color calibrating. To see how Acer did, the Triton 500 was run through our display workflow, leveraging SpectraCal’s CalMAN software suite, along with an X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter for brightness and contrast readings, and an X-Rite i1Pro2 spectrophotometer for color accuracy results.

Brightness and Contrast

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The Triton 500 gets reasonably bright, at 331 nits, considering it’s still a gaming laptop and is likely to be used indoors. That is plenty of brightness for most indoor use, and the matte coating helps minimize glare. The display also offers good contrast, thanks to excellent black levels. The display goes all the way down to 3 nits too, if you want to use it in a very dark room.

Grayscale

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

As expected, Acer isn’t calibrating this display at the factory, and the grayscale results are poor. Color balance is off quite a bit, with blue being far too strong at 100% brightness, and red being far too dim. Luckily however, the gamma is very close to the 2.2 power expected for sRGB.

Gamut

Display - Gamut Accuracy

Looking at the gamut results, which targets the 100% levels for the primary and secondary colors, you can see how far off the blue result is. It’s actually well past the correct levels for sRGB.

Saturation

Display - Saturation Accuracy

The saturation sweep targets the primary and secondary colors, like gamut, but rather than just hit the 100% levels we test at 4-bit steps to see how it is across the entire range. All of the colors are off, with teal having the most error across 0-100% and the results are pretty typical of an uncalibrated display.

Gretag Macbeth

Display - GMB Accuracy

The final test moves outside of the primary and secondary colors, and tests colors across the spectrum, including the important skin tones. Ideally, every color tested would be under the yellow line on the DeltaE 2000 graph, but almost all of them are well over. It’s not a terrible result, but it’s not good either.

Colorchecker

The colorchecker demonstrates a relative result that you can see, rather than just looking at graphs. The bottom color is the target, and the top color is the result. This is relative though because errors in your display will impact the absolute differences, but it still helps to provide a general guide as to what this display looks like. Pretty much all of the colors are significantly different than their target, and the whites are far too blue.

Display conclusion

Acer’s Predator Triton 500 is not going to be confused with a professional workstation, but that’s not really the target market, and calibration of gaming displays hasn’t really taken hold of the industry like RAID 0 has, even though the cost of one is a benefit and the cost of the RAID is a negative. Still, for this demographic it’s easier to overlook this and focus on what this display does well for gaming. The IPS panel still offers reasonable color accuracy, great contrast, and the typical excellent viewing angles you’d expect of an IPS, but this one just happens to be a 144 Hz variable refresh panel. For gaming, that makes all the difference in the world. This is easily my favorite gaming laptop display to date.

GPU Performance: Turing With Max-Q Battery Life
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  • timecop1818 - Friday, May 3, 2019 - link

    Garbage 1080p screen and not one but TWO killer network shits? Hard pass.
    What's the fucking point of 2080 if the screen isn't even 4K on this thing?
  • Rookierookie - Saturday, May 4, 2019 - link

    Optimus battery time goes from 5 hours to 3, for starters.
  • Loic - Tuesday, May 7, 2019 - link

    Are you sure it's a vm ? It looks like a User Mode Linux to me. There are some bugs that have been fixed in wsl to run UML less than a year ago so it would make sense to work with that. You'll get docker and fuse out of the box without having to manage a vm.
  • Loic - Tuesday, May 7, 2019 - link

    Wrong article sorry!
  • ballsystemlord - Thursday, May 9, 2019 - link

    Spelling and grammar corrections:
    "The most recent installment of the Lara Croft series really bumps of the graphical fidelity,"
    "up" no "of":
    "The most recent installment of the Lara Croft series really bumps up the graphical fidelity,"

    Luckily GeForce Experience makes this process pretty easy,
    Missing comma:
    Luckily, GeForce Experience makes this process pretty easy,
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