I’m not sure why that is unless the design subconsciously reminds you of displays with PWM, so your brain is compensating for that.
I was still experiencing migraines when I tried iPhone XR so I wasn’t able to properly test that phone. Honestly I liked the XR, I was more or less still upset over this entire situation and 3D Touch is a necessary part of my workflow so I returned it.
Over a year later I tried an iPhone 11 and experienced no issues. I still wasn’t totally satisfied and didn’t want to hold onto that phone for the next year or two so I returned it under the extended COVID return policy also admittedly expecting this issue to be solved on iPhone 12 since I really wanted a modern iPhone with an OLED display.
I was able to find a few prepaid carriers that have it in-stock brand new for $250. You would have to activate under that carrier and probably stay with them for a month or two.
edit:
Against my better judgement I still have my 12 Pro Max (although I’m in an awkward position where the trade-in on my 8+ was canceled and I have a label but I may have to call them if the return gets canceled) and it‘s gotten better over time, which didn’t happen for me with iPhone X. I still can’t completely rule out issues, and I’m slightly apprehensive about keeping it for a year or two.
The next PWM-free flagship iPhone I’ll likely hold onto for 2-3 years. This phone is incredible and if it was flicker-free I may have held onto it for quite a while and moved off of annual upgrades, I’m really not sure yet. Then Apple releases a new iPhone in a new color and I get tempted all over again
. It’s more or less with 24-month financing the smarter value proposition is to upgrade every 2-3 years.