ASUS rolled out a fresh gaming monitor that costs way less than their usual expensive screens. The ROG Strix OLED XG27ACDMS hit Chinese stores for 3,999 Yuan, which equals about 558 American dollars. Gamers can grab it even cheaper at 3,400 Yuan with government help in some areas. The company kept quiet about this launch until people spotted it online. This makes it the cheapest OLED gaming screen ASUS has ever sold.
The new monitor packs serious gaming power with 280Hz refresh rates at sharp 1440p quality. ASUS used fancy QD-OLED technology that beats their older screens from last year. The display shows perfect colors and reacts super fast at just 0.03 milliseconds. Gamers will love the true 10-bit colors and amazing color accuracy. The screen covers 99 percent of professional color standards that movie makers use.
ASUS added a smart sensor that saves the screen from damage. The NEO Proximity Sensor turns everything black when players walk away from their desk. This prevents image burn-in that ruins OLED screens over time. The company gives buyers three years of protection against burn-in problems. They also threw in a USB-C port for connecting laptops and phones easily.
Nobody knows when this monitor will reach American or European stores. ASUS refuses to share their international plans for the budget-friendly screen. Chinese gamers get first dibs on this affordable OLED technology. The company might test sales numbers before expanding to other countries. Gaming fans outside China will have to wait and see what happens next.
The new monitor packs serious gaming power with 280Hz refresh rates at sharp 1440p quality. ASUS used fancy QD-OLED technology that beats their older screens from last year. The display shows perfect colors and reacts super fast at just 0.03 milliseconds. Gamers will love the true 10-bit colors and amazing color accuracy. The screen covers 99 percent of professional color standards that movie makers use.
ASUS added a smart sensor that saves the screen from damage. The NEO Proximity Sensor turns everything black when players walk away from their desk. This prevents image burn-in that ruins OLED screens over time. The company gives buyers three years of protection against burn-in problems. They also threw in a USB-C port for connecting laptops and phones easily.
Nobody knows when this monitor will reach American or European stores. ASUS refuses to share their international plans for the budget-friendly screen. Chinese gamers get first dibs on this affordable OLED technology. The company might test sales numbers before expanding to other countries. Gaming fans outside China will have to wait and see what happens next.