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ARZOPA Monitor de juegos 4K UHD (3840 x 2160) de 32 pulgadas, pantalla IPS de 144 Hz, soporte de altura ajustable, montaje VESA, compatible con AMD Freesync y NVIDIA G-Sync, DP 1.4, HDMI 2.1 -M3RC

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $9,243.33

Mex $ 1,881 .00 Mex $1,881.00

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1.:120cm


2.Color:Negro


Acerca de este artículo

  • Pantalla ancha 4K UHD: presenta nuestro impresionante monitor de juegos UHD 3840x2160 de 32 pulgadas, ofreciendo un nivel inigualable de claridad y detalle para una experiencia de juego inmersiva
  • Alta frecuencia de actualización de 144 Hz: con una alta frecuencia de actualización de 144 Hz, el monitor ARZOPA garantiza un juego ultra suave, reduciendo el desenfoque de movimiento y el efecto fantasma para un rendimiento visual inmejorable
  • Soporte ajustable: el monitor Arzopa para juegos cuenta con un soporte ajustable, lo que te permite inclinar, girar y girar fácilmente para un ángulo de visión perfecto, promoviendo la comodidad y reduciendo la tensión ocular
  • Conectividad: este monitor 4K está equipado con una amplia gama de puertos, incluyendo 1 puerto de pantalla 1.4, 2 puertos HDMI 2.1, 1 puerto de salida de audio y 2 puertos USB-A 2.0, lo que facilita la conexión de todos tus dispositivos
  • Aprovechamiento de la tecnología Adaptive Sync: este monitor es compatible con FreeSync de AMD y la G-Sync de NVIDIA, eliminando el desgarro de pantalla y ofreciendo la experiencia de juego más fluida posible


ARZOPA 32" 4K UHD (3840x2160) Monitor para juegos Pantalla IPS de 144 Hz, soporte de altura ajustable, montaje VESA, compatible con AMD Freesync y NVIDIA G-Sync, DP 1.4, HDMI 2.1 -M3RC


Annabel
Comentado en Canadá el 31 de enero de 2025
You save my day at work. I love it!
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
Jonathan T.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de abril de 2025
When something is significantly cheaper than alternatives, you're going to have to sacrifice.This panel appears to be the same as the one used in the Gigabyte m32u, so I figure I'd risk it.The monitor is no frills, the OSD is terrible, but it works!Dead pixel in the bottom left of the screen, could have sent it back, but with it being 4k it's tiny and I can only see it if I put my head 6 inches away from the screen when black is being displayed. Maybe if it was in the middle of the screen it'd be a deal breaker.I highly recommend turning down the brightness. This monitor is bright, VERY bright, but set at 100 blacks look terrible.It's an IPS panel so blacks are going to be terrible anyway, but they're better with the brightness turned down to 15.The stand seems fine, adjustable in every which way. No complains.HDR mode locks out a lot of the display adjustment settings, personally I leave it off.Colors looks great, 144hz is amazing. If you can live with a dead pixels and a bare bones monitor, this is for you. If not, spend $200 more.
Matt C
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
Monitor ReviewI'm giving this monitor five stars based on its performance after setup (more on that below). I primarily use it with my MacBook Pro (M1 Max), and occasionally with an Xbox Series X and PS5. I’ve mounted it on a monitor arm (which was a hassle—details below), so I can’t comment on the included stand. Compared to my old budget 4K monitor from the early pandemic days, this one has significantly better color accuracy, vividness, and viewing angles.Upgrading from 28" to 32" took a little adjustment, but the size now feels just right. On my old monitor, I often noticed compression artifacts in dark streaming scenes—those are gone now. I'm not a serious gamer, but for what the Xbox Series X and PS5 can push, this monitor performs beautifully. I haven’t used the built-in speakers since I stick with my trusty external speaker + subwoofer setup, which easily outperforms built-ins anyway. Even the packaging gave off a high-end vibe.SetupSetup was frustrating. The VESA mount is 75 x 75 mm, and while my monitor arm supports that size, its mounting plate was too wide to fit into the recessed socket on the back of the monitor. I initially hacked together a DIY solution (which worked but was annoying). Only later did I find a pack labeled “Wall Mount Screw” in the box—those were the intended spacers and worked great. With them, the mount has a small gap but feels very secure (see photo).Device setup was a mixed bag. Xbox and PS5 worked flawlessly—true plug-and-play. The MacBook required some finagling to get both native resolution and scaled UI looking right. This is more of a macOS limitation—Apple doesn't give users enough control over resolution and UI scaling separately, although I haven't had this issue with a 4k before.My last gripe: the monitor’s on-screen menu system is unintuitive, and adjusting settings was more tedious than it should be.Final ThoughtsDespite the rocky setup, once everything is dialed in, this monitor delivers excellent value. It performs like monitors that cost nearly twice as much. Definitely worth the effort.
Sid Baksh
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 10 de abril de 2025
I have a 55” inch OLED I bought in 2020, I use it for my Series X and was always reluctant to game on a monitor because a 2160p 120hz+ screen with hdmi 2.1 was always 600-700 minimum. This monitor offers IPS plus the mentioned specs, which is unheard of at $300. I’m happy to say this monitor looks just like my 55 inch oled. I need to up the brightness on it the same way I did on the oled, but I can’t figure out how to open the screen display. I haven’t tried too hard to find the OSD because out of the box, it has phenomenal settings. I’m at 4k 120 on the Xbox and it looks more crisp naturally than the 55 inch. Only complaint is a single dead pixel out of the box about 0.5r in the screen—it’s not noticeable during games but I do see it during all black load screens. I decided to keep it and not do an exchange. I plan to use this monitor for a gaming build I’ll do this year. This monitor has a little rgb in the back which is nice. 32 inches was a perfect size coming down from 55 inch. We’ll see if 144 hz is enough of a reason to warrant an upgrade when I start pc gaming—otherwise get this monitor. It’s not only great but tremendous value
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
C. Thompson
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de noviembre de 2024
I am a real reviewer who bought this monitor with my own money.This think works great. I can't find anything to really complain about and if you knew me you'd know I can usually find **something** I don't like.This monitor just works right out of the box with no fiddling needed. Colors look great to me without needing any adjustment and the monitor works flawlessly at 4K 144Hz / 120Hz / 60Hz over both DisplayPort and HDMI. (But if using a USB C to HDMI adapter make sure the one you're using doesn't use chroma subsampling which can make fine details such as small colored text hard to read. I've tried a few different adapters bought from Amazon that had that problem. I'd recommend sticking with DisplayPort adapters instead of HDMI.)When running motion tests such as the "UFO tests" 4K 120Hz is visibly sharper than 60Hz, and 144Hz is slightly sharper than 120Hz. Since this monitor is based on LCD technology there is a small amount of apparent (optical illusion) motion blur due to the sample-and-hold nature of the technology. Because of this motion on CRTs and OLEDs will always look noticeably sharper at the same frame rate.I run Linux on my computer and am using a USB C to DisplayPort adapter running through an inexpensive DisplayPort KVM switch then connected to this monitor. Everything works flawlessly and completely stably at the full 4K 144Hz. I did find out that Linux can have issues with HDMI particularly when using AMD based integrated or discrete GPUs. DisplayPort is the way to go to make sure you have no problems. I like that the monitor can use HDMI or USB C connections in addition to DisplayPort.The stand that comes with this monitor is easy to attach without tools and completely serviceable. It allows you to adjust the height of the monitor as well as the angle both left / right and up / down. This is the first monitor I've bought in a long time where I haven't needed to immediately replace the included stand with a better VESA stand.There are a few things which I don't care about but others might. The RGB decoration lights on the back are very dim so you won't notice them even in a dark room unless you're looking directly at the back of the monitor. The monitor uses a 24V power brick which can be harder to replace than the usual 12V brick, 19V brick or 120V (US) cable. The on screen display features are about par for the course on inexpensive monitors and aesthetically the on screen display looks ugly. The buttons (on the bottom edge) are labelled on the bottom where you can't see the labels instead of on the front edge where it would make sense so you have to remember which button does what. The black border around the displayed image is thicker than it looks in the ad's photos. This is no cable management built into the stand.Overall this is a fantastic monitor especially at this steal of a price. Definitely recommended.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
Katie
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 15 de octubre de 2024
Screen is beautiful. got everything set up, just to find out the built-in speakers and audio jack were defective, and after trouble shooting every possible problem with 3 different types of customer service (the brand’s website, amazon on call support, and customer service seller messages) not only the monitor’s speakers don’t work, but won’t connect through my own speakers. I troubleshooted every possible software and hardware problem on my end, wasted all night and all of my work day just to figure out the monitor was the problem.I reached out to the Seller’s customer service and guess what they told me? “The monitor doesn’t have built in speakers.” I had to highlight it to show them their own product description. And they just ignored me when I asked why my monitor’s audio output wasn’t working with any of my speakers, and why there was a volume option in the monitor’s menu if there wasn’t built in speakers. No help. They offered me an 8$ refund to keep their defective and “misadvertised” monitor? Not even willing to send a replacement or help me solve my issue? Yeah, no thanks.If you get this and it works for you, great! It’s still a great display. But don’t expect good customer service or support or literally anything if something’s wrong with it, or if you’re looking for any help.
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