Cooler Master GM27-CFX 240Hz Gaming Monitor Review
Peter Donnell / 1 year ago
Display Analysis
On the stock settings, the monitor delivers very colour reproduction, and this can be pushed higher if you’re using the HDR mode and getting more out of the DCI-P3 support, but honestly, it looks pretty great in SDR too.
Gamma
There are five gamma settings on this monitor, which seems excessive, especially when none of them hit the desired 2.2 targets correctly. Actually, the Gammer 2.4 setting came closest, and while the testing software scored it at 2.3, it’s more like 2.25, it’s close enough and looked very good.
Grey Ramp
The grey ramp is very good throughout all the gamma modes though, with very little deviation, and is surprisingly accurate for a monitor in this price range.
Brightness
The overall peak brightness is great too, even in SDR mode it managed around 360 nits, and can do up to 400 in HDR mode, but obviously with no complex backlight filtering technologies, this can lead to a loss in contrast on darker areas too.
There are four white point settings on this monitor, and I was surprised the cooler ones were less bright, but I see no reason to take it off of the native or warm mode, as they provide a much more accurate picture anyway.
Colours
Colour uniformity is reasonable enough, a little warmer on the right, but not to a level I could actually notice by eye.
There’s perhaps a little backlight bleed in the edges, but that’s to be expected on an edge-lit panel, and it’s well-maintained on this panel, and its pretty uniform too. I would also say there’s likely some more deviance being detected than there should be, due to the curved panel which may be interfering with the light sensor.
As for colour accuracy, anything under 5 Delta-E is good, under 3, very good, under 2 is really excellent and largely, that’s where this monitor sits. It’s good enough to trust that the colour on-screen are what they were intended to be. Even the blue, which is often the one that sticks out, is kept remarkably in check here.
After running our calibration too, I actually got that down to an Average Delta of 0.98! However, it’s a pretty small gain that most users are unlikely to really notice.