276°
Posted 20 hours ago

ASUS TUF Gaming VG258QM Gaming Monitor – 24.5 inch Full HD (1920x1080), 280Hz*, 0.5ms (GTG), Extreme Low Motion Blur Sync, G-SYNC Compatible, DisplayHDR 400

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

If the 8qm is supposed to have slower response times than the 9qm, how is it that the rtings motion test seems clearer on the 8qm? I want the cleanest motion clarity and that's supposed to be dictated by response times. Do TN's with slightly slower total response times, but faster rise and fall still offer cleaner motion clarity? This is a confusing result and goes against the "math", unless rise and fall times are more important than total response time for motion clarity. Rise and fall are lower on the TN compared to the IPS's lower total response time. Dimensions, weight and color Information about the dimensions and the weight of the specific model with and without stand as well as the colors, in which it is offered to the market. Width DyAc/DyAc+ is Zowie's strobing technology, it basically fights off all or most of motion blur on the expense of strobe crosstalk artifacts (more or less visible for me depending on the game). I'd rather buy XL2546K instead of XL2546 right now (better panel, better tuned strobing supposedly). If you don't need strobing and still want a TN panel, I'd choose XL2540K or the upcoming ASUS. Out of box, it doesnt look that well calibrated IMO. I use spyderproX to calibrate my monitor to reasonable spec for RGB. I use it to also do Adobe Lightroom editing and paper prints so calibration is essential. Key specs: 27″, 1440p, IPS, 360Hz, Native G-sync (+FreeSync support), 1ms G2G, ULMB 2 blur reduction, Reflex Latency Analyzer

The second reason, was that if you wanted low motion blur, there was a hard M.E.T.A.: Use lightboost, set the boost to 10%, which ruins colors and makes it dim. I got bored. I couldn't be creative in how I set it up. Use normal 144hz, or use lightboost. That's it.If you spot any errors, broken links or have suggestions on other models we should consider adding please get in touch. of the people running this monitor at 280hz already used OD80 because it was way clearer than OD60, the average overshoot of OD80 is 19.3% which is 2x more than OD120 and it affects 46% of transitions compared to 30% of OD120, but with 2 to 5 times higher overshoot levels in each transition. Sometimes you want something that’s half TV, half monitor! Here are a selection of some really large format displays to consider. They aren’t really ideal as desktop monitors, being too big for comfortable up close work, but if you want something for gaming, consoles, movies and only light desktop work these are still good options Featured: LG 42C2 (2022) LG 42C3 (2023 model) (both reviewed)

We tested the monitor with the PS5's new variable refresh rate feature and confirmed that it's not compatible, since the PS5 only supports HDMI Forum VRR.

The pixel pitch shows the distance from the centers of two neighboring pixels. In displays, which have a native resolution (the TFT ones, for example), the pixel pitch depends on the resolution and the size of the screen. My brother needed a new monitor and decided on this one. He wanted a 27" monitor because his old monitors where always small (22 inch or smaller). We debated between the smaller version of this monitor and the 1440p version due to Pixel Per Inch (PPI) concerns. We are aware of the concerns some people have about the low PPI of 1080p resolution on a 27" monitor but I think it boils down to personal preference. I have a 1440p 27" monitor so my brother was able to see the difference between the two resolutions and he says he has no desire to switch to a 1440p monitor after seeing the difference. This is as good as it can get on this monitor, an average of 2.6ms of Rise/Fall with no overshoot at 280hz is peak performance for high refresh rate IPS panels Since the 2022 range, the C2 and C3 includes a far more sensible 42″ sized option making it more suitable as a cross-over monitor/TV and more comfortable for PC usage as well as movies and consoles. G-Sync and FreeSync Compatibility: This monitor supports both NVIDIA G-Sync and AMD FreeSync technologies, reducing screen tearing and ensuring tear-free, stutter-free gaming.

Level 2 is enough, going higher is pointless unless you use Shadow Boost to have a competitive advantage, I used Frog Pursuit's traffic light to confirm that LvL2 completely deny color inversion due to overshoot, making OD120 with Shadow Boost LVL2 both ghosting free and overshoot free, this is the perfect overdrive tweak.

Super fast, super smooth

Hey Speancer, I'm currently in the process of returning my XL2546K because of too much inverse ghosting. (for some reason, on mine I can still see inverse ghosting even on AMA OFF and OD gain on 0). Did you experience the same problem on your XL2540K? ASUS TUF Gaming 24.5” 1080P HDR Monitor VG258QM - Full HD, 280Hz (Supports 144Hz), 0.5ms, Extreme Low Motion Blur Sync, G-SYNC Compatible, DisplayHDR 400, Speaker, DisplayPort HDMI, Height Adjustable The real question is if the VG249QM1A has a good selection of overdrives because for example the 24G2ZU/E is not even close to the XG2431 in terms of response times while still using the same panel. This monitor is still not Freesync certified to this day, the 144hz version of this exact same monitor, the VG259Q, is Freesync certified.

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment