AI is most definitely the buzzword of CES 2024, and it seems that no piece of hardware is immune from the coming integration of a whole host of AI features, some with rather dubious usefulness. However, MSI has been showing off its upcoming MEG 321URX QD-OLED display at its demo suite at the Las Vega show, and its new AI-powered SkySight feature appears to be capable of detecting incoming enemies in League of Legends and giving away their position with an onscreen icon. Call me old-fashioned, but that seems…more than slightly unfair.
The display makes use of an onboard AI accelerator (via Tom's Hardware) that analyses the mini-map to anticipate incoming opponents before placing an icon on the screen to let you know exactly where they're coming from, alongside another game tracking feature that keeps an eye on your health bar and displays it on a physical RGB light strip on the monitor itself.
MSI says that this game tracking won't just be limited to League of Legends, as it'll be releasing an application that'll allow you to train these features to recognise and react to enemies and other on-screen elements in any game you like.
Interestingly, while your PC will handle the processing of the training, once the display has been configured it'll supposedly process the visual data it receives on its own, freeing up those resources on your machine for the game itself.
Beyond the headline AI integrations, the monitor itself has some impressive specifications of the more traditional kind. The 32-inch screen uses a 4k QD-OLED panel with a 15000000:1 contrast ratio, a 240Hz refresh rate, and a 0.03 ms response time, which is enough for it to achieve VESA Clear MR 13000 certification.
These figures seem to suggest that this
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