What you know about the Latest Samsung Odyssey Ark curved and cursed?
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=> You Can Check the following points of Samsung Odyssey Ark Curved & Cursed are:-
- For its $3,500 price, Samsung left a lot of ambition on the table with the Ark.
- Its curved, bright, and fast panel doesn’t make up for it not being as rich to look at as a cheaper OLED or as useful with multitasking as a couple of cheap monitors stuck together.
- The Samsung Odyssey Ark is enormous.
- Using this 55-inch curved gaming monitor feels like being in VR, and turning it vertically is like looking up at a wave that’s about to topple me over.
- I have to take a few steps to the side just to be able to see who’s sitting across from me.
- Its presence is magnetic.
- People stop to ask about it.
- Usually, they also ask to stand in front of its enveloping curve all before asking my name.
- They don’t even seem fazed when I tell them that it costs $3,500.
- The Verge’s editor-in-chief Nilay Patel burst out laughing upon seeing it in person.
=> What is the Samsung Odyssey Ark?
- The Ark, unsurprisingly, is best used for gaming.
- Its 4K resolution and 165Hz variable refresh rate push the HDMI 2.1 spec to its limits.
- Like many other gaming monitors, the Ark uses a VA panel, but it’s brighter, with better contrast than others I’ve tested, thanks to its Mini LED backlighting.
- With HDR10 Plus and 1,056 local dimming zones, movies and TV shows look great, too.
- Samsung also pitches its Multi View feature as a big deal, which lets you show up to four screens at once on the Ark.
- Its product page includes phrases like “no more getting distracted by multi-screen setups” and “Odyssey Ark really has it all,” but it’s much less useful than it sounds.
- I can play Overwatch 2 on my PS5 while watching Degrassi on Samsung TV Plus while also pulling up a YouTube video about how McDonald’s french fries are made, all on the same screen, all without connecting a device other than my PlayStation 5.
- That’s cool but the Ark can’t display more than one HDMI source at once, so multi-display setups and even plenty of smaller, cheaper 4K monitors run circles around it.
=> What includes in Samsung Odyssey Ark?
- The Ark includes a breakout box that’s packed with HDMI 2.1 ports (one with eARC for pushing high-end audio to a receiver or soundbar via HDMI), Ethernet, Wi-Fi 5,
a digital audio optical port, and USB-A ports for connecting controllers, flash drives, and other plug-and-play gadgets. - The monitor’s built-in speakers deliver bass-filled sound that can get loud without distortion, so you may not need a soundbar.
- It comes with two remotes.
- Basic candy bar-shaped IR remote and a Bluetooth remote called the Ark Dial, which makes it just a little easier to navigate the complex interface thanks to its twisting dial and feature shortcuts.
- The Ark Dial’s purpose other than being showy is that it usually halves the amount of clicking you need to do to find the right setting.
- The Ark looks very different from Samsung’s $529 TV-meets-monitor M8 Smart Monitor, but it has the same tough-to-learn interface and includes a lot of little features.
What are the general Samsung Odyssey Ark Specifications?
=> Check points below of Samsung Odyssey Ark Specifications are:-
- Display size: 55 inches
- Maximum resolution: 4K
- Pixels per inch: 80ppi
- Maximum refresh rate: 165Hz
- Curvature: 1000R
- Panel type: VA
- Backlighting: Mini LED with 1,056 dimming zones
- Aspect ratio: 16:9
- Advertised peak brightness: 1,000 nits
- HDR formats: HDR 10 Plus
- Wall mounting bracket: 200 x 200 VESA mount included
- Stand specs: Allows for 90-degree clockwise or counter-clockwise rotation into portrait mode.
- It also provides 270mm of total height adjustment in landscape mode or up to 30mm in portrait mode.
- In terms of tilt, it can tilt from -10 degrees to 10 degrees in the landscape or from -13 degrees to 10 degrees in portrait mode.
- One Connect Box ports: Four HDMI 2.1 ports (one input supports eARC), Ethernet 10/100, two USB-A 2.0 ports for downstream data, one USB-B port for upstream support, Ex-Link for servicing,
optical digital audio, One Connect port for carrying video to the Ark - Ark ports: One Connect cable port, 3.5mm headphone jack, USB-C (15W)
- Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.2, Wi-Fi 5, Ethernet (via its One Connect Box), IoT gadgets via the SmartThings hub (ZigBee protocol requires SmartThings dongle)
- Weight: 46.5 pounds without stand, or 91.5 pounds mounted to included stand
- Everything about the Ark is very extra, including its setup process.
- Setting up the Ark is a two- or a three-person job.
- Getting the hefty monitor stand, the VESA wall mount accessories, and all of the other pieces out of the box requires more time and effort than you might expect.
- And, carefully lifting out the styrofoam-covered Ark and mounting it to the stand felt like the high-stakes ship docking in that scene from Interstellar.
- Pieced together, the Ark on its stand weighs a whopping 91.5 pounds, so if you’re uncomfortable with the idea of handling heavy (and expensive) components, you should consider paying for that installation service.
- The Ark is a stunning showcase for games that have HDR support (non-HDR games shine, too).
- Forza Horizon 5, Gran Turismo 7, and Marvel’s Spider-Man: Miles Morales look great on just about any screen,but the Ark’s curve and enormous size makes a fast refresh rate and a high-resolution image feel a lot more immersive.
- Its Mini LED backlighting allows for a contrast-rich picture that can reach a peak brightness of about 900 nits,according to our SpyderX screen calibration tool.
- Samsung’s controlled testing with much pricier color-analyzing gear and software delivered over 1,000 nits.
- Either way, at full brightness, it’s intense to look at in well-lit rooms.
- Real-time strategy games with expansive battlefields and loads of characters like Starcraft II or MOBAs like DOTA 2 or League of Legends come alive on the Ark’s big screen.
What Samsung’s Odyssey Ark Capturing and is uses?
=> You Can Check Down the Samsung Odyssey Ark Uses are:-
- Samsung’s Odyssey Ark monitor displaying three sources, including Overwatch 2 on PS5, Degrassi, and a YouTube video.
- Multi View can let you do some multitasking, but there are too many rules around what you can and can’t include.
- Multi View is pitched by Samsung to “deliver more possibilities on a single screen,” but I already touched on the big catch, which is that you can’t watch more than one HDMI source at a time and there aren’t any other video inputs on the Ark.
- But there are several more limitations that may matter to you.
- If you’re playing a PC game at a 165Hz refresh rate, going into Multi View will kick that down to a maximum of 120Hz, turn off variable refresh rate mode (VRR works in Flex Move mode, by the way),
and unify the picture settings so that each input looks the same. - In other words, if you had Game Mode configured to your liking, you might not like how it looks with the default mode (though that can be tweaked)
- Also, The Ark doesn’t do a good job downsampling the HDMI input in Multi View mode.
- Text and images from my M1 MacBook Pro were grainy, and the laptop’s display settings showed me that it was still outputting a 4K / 60Hz video signal, which the Ark was compressing to around 1080p to fit it in a quarter of the screen.
- Manually dropping the output resolution to 1080p helped, but it would be better if the Ark was smart enough to automatically adjust the display resolution.
- The Ark’s instruction manual says that “when viewing multiple small screens by using Multi View, the resolutions of some screens may appear low,” which is certainly true, but a $3,500 monitor should do better.
- Then, there’s the challenge of finding fun use cases for Multi View. It can work with some, but not nearly enough of the Ark’s built-in apps.
- You can try your luck finding something worthwhile to watch on Samsung TV Plus, or the hold-on-to-your-butt excitement delivered by The Weather Channel, or the very limited Tizen browser, to name the most useful examples.
- You can display whatever you want by mirroring your Windows or Mac (via AirPlay) screen.
- Samsung’s Odyssey Ark gaming display viewed overhead to show off its curve.
- The 1000R curvature of the Ark’s display looks intense in a 16:9 aspect ratio.
- I get that displaying multiple HDMI sources with variable refresh rate along with streaming apps is a challenging feat to engineer.
- But pulling off that feature would impress me more than the Ark’s powerful design, and I think these flaws are unacceptable in this $3,500 display.
- If you want the best picture quality for gaming, you can’t beat an OLED TV.
- Its combination of speed and per-pixel control over color and dimming allows for awesome picture quality that the Ark doesn’t match. LG’s C2 and Samsung’s QD-OLED are around $1,500 or less for a 55-inch model.
- If you want something that’s better suited for a desk, Alienware’s $1,299 ultrawide QD-OLED is a great alternative.
- If you want a sizable monitor that’s great for multitasking — and great for letting you split its screen in half for two video inputs at once — LG’s $699 DualUp with its 16:18 aspect ratio is worth checking out.
- The Ark’s cup is overflowing with interesting features and high-end specs that, at a much lower price, might be worth it for some people.
- As much fun as I’ve had testing it (and showing off its curvy, swervy gimmicks to my office mates), there wasn’t a day when I didn’t wish I was using my comparatively low-end dual monitor setup instead.