Your form is focused on green tint. I have pink tint on the left side, on my Panasonic JZ1500 from 2021/2022. To me all tinting are probably similarly undesirable.
I just saw a report of “green on the right” on www.avsforum.com, which made me smile. It’s like the correction of “pink on the left” results in “green on the right”.
And fyi, my panel was replaced around April 2022. The replacement panel was 100% similar to the original, with very much the same flaw (pink on the left). To this day, I still have a love/hate relationship with this TV, because the flaw is often noticeable on “real” content.
Edited 1 month ago: clarification, replaced "geen on the side" with "green on the right", if memory serves...
When I switched from an iPhone SE to XS, this is the first thing I noticed. The viewing angles of OLED are always praised so I was very surprised when I shifted it off angle, that there was a green tint that got progressively worse. The IPS LCD of the iPhone does not have that, so had neither of all the other IPS LCD iPhones I owned. Only thing that got worse off angle with IPS is blacks (obviously not the case with OLED because the contrast is infinite so it can’t get worse), but colors are virtually perfect in comparison, Second thing I noticed was the black smear, like in settings in dark mode. It was extremely irritating because I never saw something like it, but it‘s a limit of the technology. What I notice now more than the contrast when using an LCD iPhone is the slower response time. My conclusion for phones:
OLED
almost instant response time
perfect black
IPS LCD
perfect off-angle color
no black smear
However, IPS is still significantly cheaper so it is a great option for budget constrained devices. It also means a higher refresh rate is possible at the same price, and screen replacements are cheaper.
For phones it‘s a toss up for me at this point, though the response times of OLED makes faster usage better so in high end phones I’d say a slight preference for OLED. For TVs, I prefer IPS LCD at this point because no burn in over the longer usage times (not just 2-5 years but ideally 7-10 or more years), significantly brighter thanks to Mini-LED (not possible on phone), and price is a much bigger factor (phone displays range from like $20-200, TVs range from $100 to tens/hundreds of thousands, and bigger sizes are significantly more expensive whereas phone screens are big 6.7 inch now even on $80 phones). And slower response time is not quite as limiting for TV usage except for gaming.
Your form is focused on green tint. I have pink tint on the left side, on my Panasonic JZ1500 from 2021/2022. To me all tinting are probably similarly undesirable. I just saw a report of “green on the right” on www.avsforum.com, which made me smile. It’s like the correction of “pink on the left” results in “green on the right”. And fyi, my panel was replaced around April 2022. The replacement panel was 100% similar to the original, with very much the same flaw (pink on the left). To this day, I still have a love/hate relationship with this TV, because the flaw is often noticeable on “real” content.
When I switched from an iPhone SE to XS, this is the first thing I noticed. The viewing angles of OLED are always praised so I was very surprised when I shifted it off angle, that there was a green tint that got progressively worse. The IPS LCD of the iPhone does not have that, so had neither of all the other IPS LCD iPhones I owned. Only thing that got worse off angle with IPS is blacks (obviously not the case with OLED because the contrast is infinite so it can’t get worse), but colors are virtually perfect in comparison, Second thing I noticed was the black smear, like in settings in dark mode. It was extremely irritating because I never saw something like it, but it‘s a limit of the technology. What I notice now more than the contrast when using an LCD iPhone is the slower response time. My conclusion for phones:
OLED
IPS LCD
However, IPS is still significantly cheaper so it is a great option for budget constrained devices. It also means a higher refresh rate is possible at the same price, and screen replacements are cheaper.
For phones it‘s a toss up for me at this point, though the response times of OLED makes faster usage better so in high end phones I’d say a slight preference for OLED. For TVs, I prefer IPS LCD at this point because no burn in over the longer usage times (not just 2-5 years but ideally 7-10 or more years), significantly brighter thanks to Mini-LED (not possible on phone), and price is a much bigger factor (phone displays range from like $20-200, TVs range from $100 to tens/hundreds of thousands, and bigger sizes are significantly more expensive whereas phone screens are big 6.7 inch now even on $80 phones). And slower response time is not quite as limiting for TV usage except for gaming.