Titan Army Teases Naked-Eye 3D Monitor M27E6V-3D: 4K 190Hz, HDR 1400

Naked-eye 3D displays have long teetered on the edge of being a compelling product category — technically impressive in controlled demos, but rarely convincing enough to earn a permanent spot on a desk. Titan Army is making another run at the formula, and this time the spec sheet reads like a proper enthusiast monitor that happens to do 3D without glasses.

Titan Army has announced it will showcase the M27E6V-3D, a glasses-free 3D monitor, at the Shenzhen · Nucleus Fusion Game Carnival 2026 taking place this weekend. The monitor builds on BOE’s flagship ADS Pro panel technology, backed by a 2304-zone QD Mini LED backlight system that qualifies it for VESA DisplayHDR 1400 certification — one of the highest brightness and contrast tiers available in the consumer market.

Titan Army M27E6V-3D naked-eye 3D monitor

The panel pushes 4K UHD resolution at a 190Hz refresh rate with a 1ms gray-to-gray response time, putting it firmly in high-performance gaming territory. Color coverage is listed at 99% DCI-P3, which should satisfy creators and gamers who demand wide gamut accuracy alongside fast refresh.

On the motion handling front, the M27E6V-3D supports DyDs 2.0 motion clarity technology, a dynamic backlight scanning approach designed to reduce perceived motion blur without the brightness penalty typically associated with black-frame insertion. Connectivity includes a USB Type-C port, and the monitor integrates built-in speakers.

What remains unconfirmed — and arguably the most interesting question — is how the naked-eye 3D effect performs under real gaming conditions. Past implementations of glasses-free 3D in monitors have typically relied on parallax barrier or lenticular lens arrays that limit optimal viewing angles and can introduce visual artifacts. Titan Army has not yet detailed the specific 3D technology employed in the M27E6V-3D, but the combination of a high-refresh 4K panel with Mini LED backlighting suggests the company is serious about making 3D a practical gaming feature rather than a novelty.

With the Shenzhen event opening this weekend, hands-on impressions and full specifications should follow shortly.