The guide we did before has more info, but it’s really simple. Just a matter of connecting cables and then going into display settings in Windows and your graphics card driver to detect the displays and choose whether you want to extend or duplicate. For most people, extending is what’s needed. This is the way you get a massive viewing area for your gaming and desktop apps. Duplication is more for laptop users who want to view the desktop on a larger screen than the one provided with their mobile PC.
Once set up, your extended display offers a gigantic field of view in games and for desktop apps. Most people don’t notice the bezel in between the monitors after a while, and for the most part pairing two 1080p monitors is cheaper than buying a big 4K monitor, plus you get higher refresh rates with less GPU demand. Monitors with 4K 165Hz are basically unheard of in summer 2021, because GPUs that can sustain such performance in many games do not exist yet. Two MOBIUZ 25” 1080p 165Hz monitors offer nearly the same screen size as a 48” 4K monitor, but for about a third of the price and with just as many or even better gaming features, namely variable refresh, HDR, 1ms MPRT, and powerful audio. Remember, while great, those big 4K monitors are generally re-purposed TVs with slower VA panels or extra-expensive OLED. The bigger the screen, the slower the response and the more likely ghosting becomes. Two nimble 25” IPS monitors offer faster performance.