1. May 10th, 2021 14:00. @Eric235 Dual 4K 60 Hz through a regular USB-C MST hub requires a source system that supports DisplayPort 1.4/HBR3, and the Precision 5540 only supports DisplayPort 1.2/HBR2. Thunderbolt 3 will however allow dual 4K 60 Hz from a DP 1.2 system, including through the WD19TB, but the WD19TB allocates video bandwidth across F1 2022. Fortnite – Supports 120fps with native PS5 port. Ghostrunner. Ghostwire Tokyo – Can hit up to 120fps in High Frame-Rate mode, though not recommended until VRR support comes to PS5. Jumanji: The Video Game. Knockout City. Marvel’s Spider-Man Remastered – Supports 120Hz and VRR for boosted FPS. The most significant difference between 4K and 2K monitors is their resolution. 4K monitors have a resolution of 3840×2160 pixels, while 2K monitors have a resolution of 2560×1440 pixels. This means that a 4K monitor has four times the number of pixels as a 2K monitor, resulting in a sharper and more detailed image. Screen space would be much larger. It all would probably cost about the same as a 4k monitor as well. I used to run a 3 monitor portrait setup and watching movies on it from 5 feat away or so you barely even noticed the bezels while in a dark room. Gaming at 3240x1920 was also nice up close as the diagonal was about 42 inches with 3x 24 inch 1080p Video on a 1080p Monitor . To test how 1440p video looks on a 1080p monitor, I played an animal video on a 1080p monitor, then switched the resolution between 1080p, 1440p, and 4K, and took some screenshots. Check out the images below to see the difference between a 1080p, 1440p, and 4K video on a 1080p monitor. M1 Pro 14". Previously used a 32" 4k monitor. Font smoothing off, using FF/preview for comparison. Recently purchased both a M28U (4k @ 144hz over USB-C), and a MSI Optix MAG274QRF-QD (1440p @ 144hz/165hz), over HDMI 2.0), both of which are highly rated by rtings. Fortnite PC performance at 4k vs 2k. I run a 4090, 12900k, and 32gb ddr5 4800mt and run fortnite at all high settings (except epic view distance) with DLSS performance and RT on at high. I used to have a 4k monitor and averaged around 110-115ish frames in 4k. I then downscaled and ran at 1440p and fps stayed almost exactly the same maybe 5fps Here are a couple suggestions. Lenovo 66A1GCCBUS 34.0" 3440x1440 144 Hz, curved VA panel, 350 nit brightness, HDMI and DisplayPort. Acer XV340CK Pbmiipphzx 34.0" 3440x1440 144 Hz, IPS panel, 250 nit brightness, HDMI and DisplayPort, built in speakers. If you like a curved monitor and better brightness get the Lenovo. 3H22.