Gaming certainly isn't an issue. You'd get burn-in leaving CNN on all day (static images like what surrounds the news ticker), or working with spreadsheets though for sure (doubly so if you leave sun-equivalent-brightness HDR on at all times).I would personally be hesitant to do any gaming on an OLED display.
Right, static images. Things like map overlays, health bars, etc.Gaming certainly isn't an issue. You'd get burn-in leaving CNN on all day (static images like what surrounds the news ticker), or working with spreadsheets though for sure (doubly so if you leave sun-equivalent-brightness HDR on at all times).
I've got 2 LG's, 1 is from 2017, used about 18 hours a day playing all manner of background noise and had had a good amount of gaming on it, and has no burn-in. The other I bought last year to have HDMI 2.1 and sees light use in my office when I feel like playing games between bits of work. No issue there either.
Plasmas certainly weren't all created equal. I've got two EDTV's here still and neither one has burn. Certainly a bit of luck needed, along with buying better models, when it came to those.
Never had an issue with these, even with things like a permanent crosshair on screen.Right, static images. Things like map overlays, health bars, etc.
Hence "a bit of luck" as well as buying a nicer panel. Sometimes you just get bad luck. This is why I buy the 5 year service plan, if I get a dud that burns in easy, I'll get a new one.And my Panasonic VT50 wasn't a cheap panel, but I got burn in from BOTW and Mario Odyssey all the same.
hey dude, didn't you hear? burn in totally isn't real because stuff and anecdotes.My LG CX showed image retention within hours of use. The refresher thing does clear it up but I'm concerned about long term. It's definitely got some dark splotches on it after the year or two I've had it. I mostly use it with a PC.