It wouldn't surprise me if someone does use the software training program that goes with it to program its bottom rgb strip to color-suggest the highlighted segments on Pornhub videos.
And that's actually an argument against buying this monitor, as long as you want to play any games with it. They have reason to ban you just for using this monitor. So in the end you have the choice between one monitor that could get you banned and all the others that don't. I know which one I wouldn't choose.
Yup. The fastest return of my life was when I found out my mouse was banned from the game I literally bought a few minutes earlier. Of course it was Rust. Just because I have a mouse with macros and scripts doesn't mean I'm using them (I really don't lol).
This isnt just going to get used in LOL but any game that it can be trained on. This is basically another example of money giving people an advantage over everyone else. You buy the monitor, train it and bam, you are "better" at playing pretty much any video game you want and there's not much that can be done to negate that advantage.
Contrary to what device manufacturers would have people believe, the differences in gaming outcome between a cheap keyboard or mouse and expensive ones isn't much. But what this monitor is claimed to be able to do would provide a significant tangible advantage. This shouldn't be normalized.
I can "cheat" with my current nearly decade old monitor. It has 4 cross hair overlay settings to choose from, so even if the game doesn't provide me with a cross hair, I can still have one.
Missing a 0.5 second blip on the minimap vs the monitor telling you HEY HE'S OVER THERE! for several seconds with a big icon you can't miss or ignore, is not quite the same.
One of them is a big advantage. Even pros miss fast blips on the minimap. And it's their job to be "observant"
By that logic, aimbots should be fine in FPS because the dude was on the screen for it to trigger. I would have had that headshot if I had faster reflexes, so it's all good.