Gamers often feel lag on monitors advertised with 1 ms response times because input lag and response time measure two entirely different things. Input lag determines how responsive the display feels, while response time controls how clearly moving objects appear.

Introduction: The Great Monitor Delay Confusion
Many players assume a 1 ms GtG rating means their monitor reacts instantly. In practice, the total delay between a mouse click and the visible result on screen includes signal processing and scanout time that the GtG number never captures. Distinguishing these factors lets you diagnose whether a sluggish feel comes from the panel itself or from internal processing.
Input Lag vs. Response Time: A Technical Divide
Input lag measures the full chain of delay from your peripheral input to the moment the pixel changes on screen. It combines the monitor's internal scaler, any frame buffering, and the time required to scan the new frame onto the panel. Response time, expressed as GtG, only tracks how quickly a pixel can shift from one gray level to another. A monitor can post an excellent 1 ms GtG figure yet still introduce 15 ms or more of total input lag if its scaler is slow.
The 'Feel vs. Look' Diagnostic Framework
You can isolate the source of delay with two quick checks. Move the mouse cursor across the desktop; if it feels heavy or delayed even with high frame rates, the bottleneck is usually processing lag from the scaler or active post-processing features. Next, drag a high-contrast window rapidly across the screen. Persistent trails or smearing indicate that the panel's GtG response time is the limiting factor. Features such as local dimming and HDR processing can each add several milliseconds; toggling them off often restores the crisp responsiveness many competitive players expect.
Why Refresh Rate Matters: Reducing Scanout Lag
Higher refresh rates shorten the time it takes for the monitor to draw each new frame from top to bottom. The difference is measurable and directly affects perceived responsiveness.
Scanout Time by Refresh Rate
Higher refresh rates reduce the time required to scan a full frame onto the screen, lowering one component of input lag.
Show data table
| Refresh Rate | Scanout Time (ms) |
|---|---|
| 60 Hz | 16.7 |
| 144 Hz | 6.9 |
| 240 Hz | 4.2 |
| 360 Hz | 2.8 |
As this comparison shows, moving from 60 Hz to 240 Hz cuts scanout time from 16.7 ms to roughly 4.2 ms. The improvement is most noticeable in fast-paced titles where every millisecond of visual feedback matters.
Hidden Causes of Monitor Delay: Scalers and Processing Overhead
The monitor's internal scaler converts incoming signals and applies image enhancements. Budget or multi-feature scalers often buffer entire frames, adding latency that never appears on the spec sheet. Enabling local dimming on Mini-LED models introduces additional zone-calculation overhead, typically in the 5 ms range. Running the panel at a non-native resolution forces extra interpolation work and can compound the delay. Disabling unnecessary processing through Game Mode remains the fastest way to minimize this hidden tax.
The 1 ms Myth: GtG vs. MPRT Explained
GtG measures the best-case pixel transition speed under controlled test conditions. It does not account for persistence blur that occurs because the pixel remains lit for the full refresh cycle. MPRT captures that actual on-screen duration and explains why even 1 ms GtG panels can still show motion blur. OLED panels reach 0.03 ms GtG, yet the scaler's processing speed still governs the overall feel of responsiveness. Strobe modes can reduce MPRT further, but they cannot compensate for a slow front-end scaler.
Competitive Edge: Choosing the Right KTC Monitor for Low Latency
For players who prioritize the shortest total latency, high-refresh-rate IPS models such as the H25X7 and H27E6 deliver the lowest scanout times. When motion clarity is the primary concern, the G27P6 OLED provides near-instant pixel transitions. Dual-mode panels like the H27P6 let users drop to 1080p at 320 Hz for esports without sacrificing the option of native 4K for other tasks. In every case, enabling Game Mode and disabling HDR or local dimming during competitive sessions removes the most common sources of added delay.
The Verdict: Prioritize 'Feel' for Competitive Play
Competitive FPS players gain more from high refresh rates and minimal processing overhead than from chasing the lowest GtG number alone. Cinematic or story-driven gaming tolerates the small latency cost of HDR and local dimming in exchange for improved contrast and color. The practical takeaway is simple: verify real-world input-lag measurements rather than relying on marketing response-time claims, and adjust processing features based on the demands of each game.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a High Refresh Rate Reduce Input Lag?
Higher refresh rates shorten scanout time and deliver fresher frames more quickly, which improves perceived responsiveness. They do not, however, bypass scaler or buffer delays inside the monitor.
What Is the Difference Between 1 ms GtG and MPRT?
GtG measures the speed of a single pixel transition under test conditions. MPRT measures how long that pixel remains visible during motion and better reflects real-world blur. The two numbers describe separate aspects of performance.
How Can I Reduce Monitor Input Lag?
Enable Game Mode, disable HDR and local dimming, run the panel at its native resolution, and ensure the GPU is delivering frame rates close to the monitor's refresh rate. These steps remove the most common sources of added processing delay.
Does Local Dimming Add Measurable Lag?
Yes. Mini-LED local-dimming algorithms calculate zone brightness on every frame and typically add 5 ms or more of processing time. The penalty varies by implementation and is most noticeable in competitive play.
Is OLED Always Faster Than Fast IPS for Gaming?
OLED panels achieve extremely low GtG times and eliminate ghosting, yet overall input lag still depends on the monitor's scaler and feature set. Some OLED models include heavy processing that can offset the pixel-speed advantage.





