Sony Sony 27" 4K Spatial Reality Display Review

The Sony Spatial Reality Display creates 3D images without glasses, but it costs $4750 and is too slow for gaming or movies. It's only for a very specific professional niche.

Screen Size 27
Resolution 3840 x 2160
Panel Type LCD
Refresh Rate 60
Response Time Ms 14
Sony Sony 27" 4K Spatial Reality Display monitor
49.6 ओवरऑल स्कोर

The 30-Second Version

A $4750 monitor that's only good for looking at still 3D models. It's a fascinating tech demo that's useless for almost everything you'd actually do with a screen.

Overview

This thing is a weird, expensive, and utterly fascinating piece of tech. The Sony Spatial Reality Display is a 27-inch 4K monitor that creates a glasses-free 3D effect by tracking your eyes with a high-speed sensor. The one thing to know is that it's a specialized tool, not a general-purpose screen. It's built for viewing and interacting with 3D models and visualizations, and it's priced like a professional instrument. For anything else, it's a terrible choice.

Performance

The performance data in our database is brutal. Its overall performance score is dead last among monitors. That's because it's a 60Hz panel with a 14ms response time, which is laughably slow for any kind of motion. It's not built for gaming or fast-paced video. The surprise is how good the color and display quality are, ranking well above average. So it's a beautiful, static canvas for 3D objects, but it can't handle anything that moves quickly.

Performance Percentiles

Color 88.5
Portability 87.2
Display 87.2
Feature 31.3
Ergonomic 69.5
Performance 1.2
Connectivity 79.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong color (89th percentile) 89th
  • Strong compact (87th percentile) 87th
  • Strong display (87th percentile) 87th
  • Strong connectivity (80th percentile) 80th

Cons

  • Below average performance (1th percentile) 1th
  • Below average feature (31th percentile) 31th

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 27"
Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)
Panel Type LCD
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Performance

Refresh Rate 60 Hz
Response Time 14

Color & HDR

Brightness 400 nits
Color Gamut 1.07 Billion Colors (8-Bit+FRC)

Connectivity

USB-C 1
Speakers Yes

Ergonomics

Height Adjustable No
Tilt No
Swivel No
Pivot No
VESA Mount 100x100

Features

Touchscreen No
Weight 8.2 kg / 18.1 lbs

Value & Pricing

Worth it only if your job literally requires you to stare at 3D models without glasses. For that specific professional or creative niche, it might be a justified tool. For everyone else, it's a colossal waste of money. You could buy three top-tier 4K OLED gaming monitors and still have cash left over.

Price History

$4,000 $5,000 $6,000 $7,000 Mar 9Mar 22 $6,519

vs Competition

Don't compare this to normal monitors. The Samsung Odyssey G9 is a gaming beast. The ASUS ROG Swift is a blisteringly fast 4K screen. The MSI MPG 322URX is a stunning OLED. They're all better, cheaper, and more versatile for almost every task. The only thing this Sony does that they can't is the spatial 3D trick. If you need that trick, there's no comparison. If you don't, every other monitor wins.

Common Questions

Q: Can I use this for gaming?

No. The 60Hz refresh rate and slow response time would be a disaster. It's not built for that at all.

Q: What do you actually use it for?

Viewing 3D CAD models, medical scans, or product designs without needing a VR headset. It's a niche professional tool.

Q: Is the 3D effect good?

Yes, it's impressive and works without glasses. But it only works with supported software and content, which is limited.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a great 4K monitor for work, gaming, or movies, this isn't it. Go get an ASUS ROG Swift or an MSI OLED instead. If you need a portable screen, this 18-pound beast is the opposite of what you want.

Verdict

We can't recommend this as a monitor. It's a professional visualization device. If you're a designer, engineer, or medical professional who needs to examine 3D data in a new way, and your budget allows for $4750 experiments, it's worth a look. For anyone buying a screen to use with a computer for normal work, play, or content creation, skip it completely. It's the wrong tool.