No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroVoid storm
Comentado en Canadá el 9 de marzo de 2025
The monitor works fine, but the thing that blew my mind is how Asus messed up so bad, making a 300HZ monitor with HDMI 2.0 ports and you need an HDMI 2.1 port to get the whole 300HZ, so unless you use a DisplayPort you’re fine if you decide to use it for a laptop or anything with an HDMI, you’ll need to get a new cable with different ends (DP 1.4 to HDMI 2.1)
Arnoldo
Comentado en México el 8 de marzo de 2025
Excelente monitor para juegos y demas!!!
Fernando
Comentado en México el 24 de marzo de 2025
es lo mejor de lo mejor me llego con buena proteccion y lo mejor de todo es que es muy facil de instalar, la velocidad de respuesta es buena, los hz si son, y buen brillo
Matt K.
Comentado en Canadá el 27 de enero de 2025
Didn't come with plastic peal and other signs of a being a new monitor, also displays black lines across the screen when at 240, 270, and 300hz. Will be returning for refund.
Angel Cuevas
Comentado en México el 5 de febrero de 2024
presento 2 pixeles muertos al segundo dia , lo compre con la esperanza de ser del 66% de las personas que les salieron bien el monitor pero tristemente me toco ser del 44% que les salio mal, mantenganse alejados de este monitor!.
Donny
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 31 de octubre de 2024
The ASUS ROG Strix 49-Inch Ultra-Wide Curved Gaming Monitor is a phenomenal piece of tech that has completely transformed my gaming and productivity setup. The massive ultra-wide screen and 1800R curvature create an immersive view that draws you into games and makes multitasking seamless. Colors are vivid and sharp, with impressive contrast, making every detail pop whether I’m gaming or working.I not only use it for gaming, but it’s also been a huge boost to my productivity for work. The expansive screen real estate allows me to keep multiple windows open side-by-side, so I can easily manage tasks, compare documents, and stay organized without needing multiple monitors. The built-in KVM switch is a game-changer, too—I can effortlessly toggle between my gaming PC and work laptop with one keyboard and mouse setup, which keeps my desk clean and efficient.The high refresh rate and low response time deliver buttery-smooth gameplay without any noticeable lag or tearing, even in fast-paced scenes. This monitor is a solid investment for serious gamers and professionals alike. ASUS has truly outdone themselves with a monitor that delivers on all fronts—size, quality, and versatility!
Tenacci
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 11 de enero de 2024
while everyone was raving about the ultrawide monitors from our korean counterparts, Asus has been quielty releasing these gems.I spend most of my day looking at spreadsheets, and the rest watching movies and playing video games. I needed a panel that would LAST, so I knew an OLED or LED or QDLED or whatever LED variant out now will inevtiably experience burn-in on the screen as it did on my wallet. This product's VA panel is more resistant to burn-in.I'm also a toxic gamer, so a high refresh rate and relatively low latency monitor was my next consideration. Compared to modern IPS panels with ~1ms latency, VA panels normally have a ~4ms response time. This Asus monitor promises ~1ms, but I can't really confirm that with my own eyes. I guess that's fast enough for me. 4ms is 4/1000 of 1 second. My reaction time is worse than that.VA panels are also infamous for their motion blur, which this panels has, but not a dealbreaker because it's hardly noticable. I tested motion blur and screen tearing with the ufotest website. Results are what you'd expect, but far from unusable when I need to 360 no-scope newbs across the map.I own two laptops. One is for work and the other for games. my previous solutions for switching between laptops for a monitor was a usb-c docking station. my next solution was a KVM switch inside a docking station. My wires kept tangling and I felt less comfortable doing the inny-outty on my laptop's usb-c port everyday. This monitor has a USB-C, USB, HDMI, and Displayport inputs. I can finally keep my laptops plugged in and switch between them more seemlessly.out of the box, for me at least, no dead pixels. 100% working. good build quality. good product. this all-in-one solution really helped clean up my desk and meets all of my expections.ALSO ONLY DISPLAYPORT AND USB-C can output 165hz. HDMI can only output 75hz!
Sherlyn
Comentado en México el 2 de abril de 2024
No se pudo cargar el contenido.
The Squirrel
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de diciembre de 2023
Scant reviews on this monitor. Seems like Asus didn't market it well or was behind the times with this model.TL;DR - This Asus is a fine ultrawide. However, I prefer my Samsung CRG9 due to slightly superior picture quality and lower cost at the time of this review. I wouldn't have been able to tell the difference between the two panels except I had both monitors operating side by side. This Asus was perfect out of the box - no dead pixels, no real issues. I'd start with the Asus if its cost was equal to the CRG9. I had to return my CRG9 once due to Samsung's ongoing rubbish quality control issues - that hassle was awful.Specifically, regarding the Asus picture quality: picture blurring/ghosting for fast moving objects was a margin worse despite having 165hz. The CRG9 was also outright brighter/better sustained nits. The Asus wins out almost everywhere else unrelated to picture. Asus is superior with integrated KVM, USB-C, build quality, quality control, packaging, inclusion of speakers, software. Asus' ELMB Sync (anti-blur/ghosting) tech works but just didn't make the cut for me.A bit of elaboration on Asus' features since it's not documented well. ELMB Sync is an Asus backlight strobing method used to mitigate motion blur. Does what it implies and flashes the LED backlight in sync with the monitor frequency. This will momentarily darken/black out a frame between each displayed frame. The trade-off with the technology is it requires darkening your screen brightness to operate. This operates fine on both AMD and Nvidia cards that support Freesync/G-sync. ELMB sync works to some extent, but it's far from perfect.The Asus' integrated KVM uses the built-in USB-A/B hub and USB-C inputs to operate as hardware KVM or software KVM. You can use either method - e.g. turn it on/off. What does that mean? A hardware KVM works just like it sounds - hardware input/output (keyboard, video, mouse) operate on a switch. Press KVM button, devices effectively unplug from one PC/laptop device and plug into the other. Software KVM opens a data connection to both devices using monitor USB connections: USB-C over Displayport to Device 1, and the monitor's USB-A/USB-B hub connection to Device 2. The monitor presents installable software to each device (PC/laptop) to install. That lets you manage and facilitate drag and drop from one device to another in a PBP/PIP (Picture-by-Picture) setup. If you have a work issued laptop that doesn't allow outside software installs, you'd be best advised to stick with the hardware KVM mode.The Asus has some other frills as well. You can manage custom aspect ratios for multiple PIP/PBP inputs. Integrated down-firing speakers which are acceptable as far as panel speakers go. In-depth options menus for color adjustments. Factory color calibration including a card to illustrate such.I wouldn't suggest the HDR mode. It reduces brightness for HDR mode and lacks sufficient local dimming to leverage much for HDR. The panel has enough inherent brightness and color gamut to operate in SDR and comparatively look great.A bit of background on reference to the CRG9 on an Asus review: My first CRG9 showed up with a cluster of dead pixels center screen and a few in the upper left. Both the original CRG9 I bought and the replacement creaks, clicks, and pops as the glue in the monitor heats up. Notoriously bad Samsung warranty support. That's what made me look for an alternative which is this Asus XG49WCR. So I had the time to compare the replacement CRG9 and Asus side-by-side. It may be a helpful reference point.
Roberto Lazcano
Comentado en México el 3 de diciembre de 2023
No se pudo cargar el contenido.
Productos recomendados