The desktop OLED monitor is no longer the unicorn it once was. I used the term “desktop OLED” over 10 years ago to describe high-contrast VA panels. I think it was something like, “there’s no more contrast to be had this side of a desktop OLED.” Now you can buy a desktop OLED monitor, not a slightly shrunken TV or an ultra-wide, but a truly flexible 27-inch 16:9 panel that delivers all of OLED’s promise and next-level gaming performance.
At around $1,000 to start, the Asus ROG Swift PG27AQDM is a premium purchase. But it also offers something no LCD can – infinite contrast. That’s not just a buzzword; I truly can’t measure an OLED panel’s black levels. When the pixels are off, they’re off. And unlike a Mini LED, every pixel can be modulated. Where a Mini LED has at most 1,152 dimming zones, a QHD OLED has 3,686,400. Which one do you think will look better?
Asus doesn’t stop there though. The color gamut is wider than all but a few panels I’ve tested, almost 97% of DCI-P3. And that color is spot-on and accurate with no need for calibration. My adjustment efforts only resulted in tiny measurement gains with no change in image quality.
The advantage of OLED video processing also cannot be understated. After testing many fast LCDs, I have observed that an OLED running at the same frame rate has visually superior motion resolution. Translation: moving objects are clearer. This is true both in test patterns and in real content. The PG27AQDM is one of the quickest monitors I’ve tested. And that includes comparisons to 360 and 500 Hz screens.
If you’re looking for the ultimate gaming monitor, it’s hard to imagine one better than the Asus ROG Swift PG27AQDM. Once you’ve tried it, you’ll want it.
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