Budget gamers just got fresh pixel options without breaking the bank. AOC dropped the Q24B36X, and Q27B36X displays under the B3 label. These IPS panels push 1440p resolution at one hundred forty-four hertz with snappy zero-point-five millisecond response times. The smaller screen costs roughly one hundred forty-six dollars while the bigger sibling lands near one hundred seventy-three bucks.
The twenty-four-inch variant packs one hundred twenty-three pixels per inch for sharper images. It covers a decent color space, while the twenty-seven-inch version stretches those numbers slightly higher for better vibrancy. Both units target hybrid users needing decent performance for office grinds and competitive matches without paying premium rates.
Ports remain basic because cutting costs requires sacrifice. Users get HDMI 2.0 and DisplayPort 1.4 inputs alongside a headphone jack. Sadly, no USB hubs exist here. That lack of peripheral support confirms these screens focus strictly on delivering essential visuals rather than fancy extras.
The twenty-four-inch variant packs one hundred twenty-three pixels per inch for sharper images. It covers a decent color space, while the twenty-seven-inch version stretches those numbers slightly higher for better vibrancy. Both units target hybrid users needing decent performance for office grinds and competitive matches without paying premium rates.
Ports remain basic because cutting costs requires sacrifice. Users get HDMI 2.0 and DisplayPort 1.4 inputs alongside a headphone jack. Sadly, no USB hubs exist here. That lack of peripheral support confirms these screens focus strictly on delivering essential visuals rather than fancy extras.