![]() ![]() Support for Nvidia’s G-Sync means that screen tearing is never an issue and the 240Hz refresh rate means the action moves along very smoothly. ![]() Motion handling is again good rather than outstanding. The Medion control panel lets you mess around with the display colour settings until the cows come home but with the colour enhancement feature turned off, the panel recorded a Delta-E variance against the sRGB profile of 1.8 which is comfortably below the 2 at which a trained eye will start to notice colour deviation and well below 3 at which the untrained eye will spot anything amiss. Though, that’s typical of gaming laptops in this price bracket so not a stick to beat the X20 with. The colour gamut coverage could be better with 93.9% of the sRGB gamut available, but only 68% Adobe RGB and 70.8% DCI-P3. As you can deduce from the resolution, this is a 16:10 display, a squarer layout than 16:9 and one better suited to gaming or working than watching widescreen video, due to the thicker black bars that perforce fill the space above and below the image. A standard 2,560 x 1,600 IPS affair it has a good maximum brightness of 411nits and a good contrast ratio of 1,263:1. The display is the weakest link in the X20’s armour but that’s only because it’s just plain good rather than in any way exceptional for the price.
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