Отзывы о 64.5" Монитор ASUS ROG Swift PG65UQ, 3840x2160, 144 Гц, *VA
118 отзывов пользователей o ASUS ROG Swift PG65UQ
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ASUS ROG Swift PG65UQ?
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The only downside to the monitor, at least with mine, was the back light bleed. Mine does have a small amount. It's not something that I really notice in day to day use, but when I turn the lights off I can definitely see it.
Spent a couple hours testing it & calibrating to get where I want, but shows almost no signs of light bleed or any other screen issues.
Highly recommend if you're on the hunt for a new monitor!
El soporte es bueno, es plástico pero se puede quitar para montarlo a la pared, el monitor es algo ligero.
Tiene botones en la parte de atrás derecha, que permiten acceder a la configuración fácilmente.
Tiene entrada HDMI, Display Port y DVI.
Yo personalmente juego muchos videojuegos de carreras, Forza, Need for speed, Project Cars en PC, y jugar a 165 hz es realmente mucha diferencia desde los 60Hz a los que jugaba.
I really like the IPS panel too, colours looked aqmuch better than my previous VA monitor.
Not a fan of the ELMB sync tho, makes me dizzy.
This will be a brief review, haven't owned it long enough to go into how it will respond in the long term.
The unit I got had no faulty pixels, and an acceptable amount of IPS light bleed. Color, clarity and overall enjoyment is better than my 144hz AOC 24G1. The 280hz is a significant improvement over 144hz in terms of image smoothness, overshoot settings need to be adjusted for refresh rate but leaving it at stock 60 should be ok for mixed use cases, 80 is optimal if you have a high end PC capable of 200+ Frames, 60 is balanced, and 40 is if you're a 60fps 60hz console gamer, these settings provided the smoothest image with the highest quality. Out of the box config in racing mode was pleasant to my eyes, I doubt I will change anything. Default warm colors is a little cool, but not as far as to show any blue(some displays have very blue warm modes).
Gsync compatibility is fine, it hides the fact that it is a freesync display by throwing gsync labels all over the place but it functions perfectly with gsync enabled. Have not, and probably will not use its HDR mode, so YMMV if that is important to you, despite this display not supporting true HDR. (HDR 400 certification is a sham imo, especially on an 8bit display.)
Input latency feels as butter smooth as my AOC monitor, the difference is too minuscule to tell when running from my PC. I swapped over to my nintendo switch, and this monitor is supposed to have poor input latency, and usually anything over 20ms from the display feels clunky to me, but despite the readings people are getting I didn't feel any input clunkiness or lag while playing high precision games like Mario Maker 2. In fact I ran through a Kaizo low clear level and it wasn't any harder than it was with my lower latency display, my movements were precise and accurate which is impossible on my TV which has close to 30ms in game mode, and 50 out of it. If you are still playing competitive games that are locked to 60hz you might want to look elsewhere but honestly speaking it wasn't enough to be of any detriment on this display.
A few non-consequential plusses are that it is not curved, my last 2 monitors were and it was nifty at first but eventually became a bit annoying. ====Flat is Justice.====
Fit my monitor arm A-OK, Vesa 100x100.
The BenQ Light bar fits perfectly on this display, and since its flat doesn't result in bright edges.
If for some reason you cant see BIOS/GRUB you need to use HDMI for when you need to use those functions, its a video card monitor initialization bug(I only have 1 display not 2 so its not a normal priority issue), I don't know how to fix it, but the monitor is fine and once your PC reaches an OS(Windows, Linux) all will be right with display port. Just don't keep it in HDMI since you lose out on all the fancy stuff your PC can do like 280hz.







