If you’re reading HotHardware, you probably already know that displays based on Organic Light-Emitting Diodes, or “OLEDs”, have a lot of advantages over more conventional liquid-crystal displays (LCDs.) They offer essentially-instant response times, highly-saturated colors, and inky blacks that make for decent final contrast ratios despite relatively lacking brightness compared to LCDs.
The site’s testing includes over 100 TVs as well as a small handful of monitors, and it says that “after 18 months, all OLEDs are now showing signs of permanent burn-in.” Apparently, Samsung displays are among the most resilient, while a Vizio OLED is apparently the worst, with the words “Breaking News” and “2024” clearly visible even with other content on screen. In fact, RTINGS called the display “nearly unusable” at the 14-month mark.
But for the monitors’ part, the testers say that there’s been “very little change” since the 1-year update. At that time, the site said that the CNN “Breaking News” bar is barely visible, but critically, that it only shows up on test slides. With real content, it’s apparently not noticeable. That bodes well even for users who play games for long periods where the UI remains visible on screen, like Final Fantasy XIV or Minecraft.
What does this tell us? Well, there’s clearly burn-in on the displays. For some people, that will be enough to say “no OLEDs for me, thanks,” and we can’t really disagree. If you’re a real purist, any burn-in is going to affect the image, even if you can’t necessarily tell at a glance. However, a barely visible image that really only manifests as a brightness difference on test patterns after 18 months of extremely abusive usage doesn’t sound particularly concerning to us.
In any case, at this stage virtually all OLEDs have warranties of three years or more that explicitly cover image retention, so that’s another point to consider. Ultimately, while image burn-in is absolutely still a thing with OLEDs, as long as you’re buying a quality display from a reputable vendor that stands behind its warranties, we wouldn’t worry about it too much.