Asus VG248QE or BenQ XL2411Z?

Solution
The general recommendation is:

Amercas - Asus / Europe BenQ due to typical pricing and get the Asus is you sensitive to ghosting

This shud help ... the z being the successor to the T

https://pcmonitors.info/others/benq-xl2411t-vs-asus-vg248qe/

In this comparison between the two monitors it is really very difficult to pick a clear winner. It is certainly worth looking through our reviews of both models for a more thorough analysis. The XL2411T has a slight edge in its colour quality with better gamma handling at 144Hz. It is possible to improve things on the desktop, where most users would find these issues most noticeable, by applying an ICC profile. We provide one for AMD and another for Nvidia users in our VG248QE review.

Both...
The general recommendation is:

Amercas - Asus / Europe BenQ due to typical pricing and get the Asus is you sensitive to ghosting

This shud help ... the z being the successor to the T

https://pcmonitors.info/others/benq-xl2411t-vs-asus-vg248qe/

In this comparison between the two monitors it is really very difficult to pick a clear winner. It is certainly worth looking through our reviews of both models for a more thorough analysis. The XL2411T has a slight edge in its colour quality with better gamma handling at 144Hz. It is possible to improve things on the desktop, where most users would find these issues most noticeable, by applying an ICC profile. We provide one for AMD and another for Nvidia users in our VG248QE review.

Both monitors are exceptionally responsive and can also be used (in a hacky way, currently) by Nvidia users with LightBoost in 2D for a ‘CRT-like’ blur-free experience. LightBoost aside, the ASUS does have a slight edge here in that it has more flexible pixel overdrive options. In its intermediate settings it maintains excellent pixel responsiveness and very low levels of ‘conventional trailing’, whilst suffering from less inverse ghosting than the BenQ (AMA High or Premium). Very few people actually notice this faint and short-lived ghosting on the BenQ, though, and most of those who do notice don’t find it bothersome. For most users it isn’t something to worry about at all.

With both having their pros and cons the real clincher could be the price and availability. In the United States only the ASUS is currently available – and is available at an excellent price of under $300. In many other regions the price is a bit higher and the BenQ model is actually available to consider. In the UK, for example, the ASUS typically costs around £300 whereas the BenQ typically costs £240 or under. The only real reason to plump for the VG248QE, for £60 more, would be if you know that the inverse ghosting would bother you. Or you prefer how it looks. Or, perhaps, that your graphics card lacks a DVI output but offers DisplayPort or Mini DisplayPort.


 
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