Great screen, both by performance and visually. The stand is sturdy and provides great cable management. Viewing angles could be better but it can be adjusted to the desired angle very well
Manufacturer: Asus
Great screen, both by performance and visually. The stand is sturdy and provides great cable management. Viewing angles could be better but it can be adjusted to the desired angle very well
This monitor is an insane upgrade from anything short of 180hz, The difference is worth it even as an upgrade from 144hz. Highly recommend to all gamers.
Unbeatable in-game but for the other task, you pass go free...
- Very quick with 144Hz; - G-sync is just to smooth; - ULMB is great for text; make it sharp and not washed when scrolling
- Some bleeding all arround the frame; - Cannot save custom color setup; - Angle vision is Null; you need to right in front; - When rotated to the vertical; color become bad due to angle vision; - Color could be better; - I like to have G-sync in-game and ULMB on desktop but both cannot be activated...
Pros: Decent enough colour Good, easy to navigate menus Great look Cons: Arrived with a dead pixel (not returnable unless theres 5 or more) Asus warranty
If you're picking up a monitor for competitive gaming, you'll want the display to be sharp and fast. The Asus ROG Swift PG248Q ($379) succeeds on both of these fronts, delivering quick response times and a speedy 180Hz refresh rate within a crisp 1080p display.
Highly adjustable; G-Sync support; Easy to navigate
Expensive for 1080p; No speakers
Kitguru Says: The ASUS ROG SWIFT PG248Q boasts a humungous 180Hz refresh when overclocked and lots of great features for gamers, but it is one of the most expensive 24in Full HD panels on the market.
144Hz refresh in normal mode; 180Hz when overclocked; NVIDIA G-Sync support; GameVisual presets optimised for different game types; Extra GamePlus widgets including crosshairs; frame rate and timer; Great colour accuracy when calibrated
Very expensive; Brightness isn't very uniform
Hot on the heels of one Asus gaming display that we've recently tested, the superbly priced Asus MG248Q , comes another closely related gaming monitor, the ROG Swift PG248Q. It bears a number of similarities: it's a 24-inch screen with a native 1080p resolution and a twisted nematic (TN) panel...
I would recommend this for the price I had gotten it for which was $280. I've had no technical issues with it. It comes with a displayport 1.4 cable and everything you need.
Does go up to 180hz
- Picture quality is a bugger to get right and even then it still will never look as good as my
gsync works great, no tearing, no extreme banding issues, slight light bleed above 120hz but nothing as noticeable as overclock mode to 180hz... i stick to 144hz everything is pretty sharp and clear.
Buying a really good monitor used to be easy. The more money you spent, the obviously better the specs. Expensive monitors had higher resolution, used better panel tech, reproduced more colours more accurately, and had lower response times. That was then and this is now.
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