all i can say is get this monitor! Gaming resolution is a 60hz at 3840x2160. This is as fine as it gets!!! AWSOME
all i can say is get this monitor! Gaming resolution is a 60hz at 3840x2160. This is as fine as it gets!!! AWSOME
ASUS cheesed me off mightily about 10 years ago with their customer support being in the toilet and this is the first product of theirs I have bought in about a decade. I do bear grudges. This monitor has the exact same panel as the Samsung 4K.
My son now has this as his middle monitor (!) and is very pleased with it. Exemplary quality, performance and style. Presently driven by an Asus R9 380 4GB but there are plans to double this using Crosshair. Excellent sturdy stand, comes with HDMI and (preferred) DisplayPort cables.
Let's just start with the obvious. 4K is awesome for professionals. My raw 18-megapixel photos can almost be shown at 100 percent zoom on a 4K monitor, as opposed to a 1080p monitor that just shows a small portion (less than one-fourth).
Kitguru says: The ASUS PB287Q isn't perfect, but for the price and the target audience, the many pros easily outweigh the cons.
Competitively priced; stand is heavy; well made and can rotate into portrait mode; 1ms GTG refresh; panel linearity is decent; image quality is high
TN panel can't compete with a quality IPS or IGZO panel; You may need to upgrade your graphics card for 4k gaming; power button is in a bad location
A quality 4K panel, with a great price and some neat extras.
"4k" seems to be one of the buzzwords that people like throwing around these days. Retailers don't know how to sell it, and consumers don't quite know if they want it. While we've traditionally seen 4k content been harped about with consumer TVs, the term is slowly making its way to the PC market as...
+ Gorgeous high-resolution display; + Incredibly quick refresh rate; + Makes 4k affordable to the average user
- Requires supremely powerful machine to render properly; - OSD controls are awkward to reach
Asus was among the first manufacturers to jump on the 4K monitor bandwagon, and back in October 2013 it led the charge with the wallet-crushing £3,000 Asus PQ321QE (web ID: 384841).
I give this monitor 5 stars but the only thing I would say is putting the buttons on the back is really stupid however I can live with that design flaw
The Asus PB287Q is the first in what we expect to be a minor glut of ‘cheap' 4K monitors from known brands, including Dell, AOC and Samsung. They're all based on cheaper TN panel technology and claim low 1ms response times, which ought to make them perfect for those looking to play the latest games...
Good features for price; Low input lag; 60Hz over DisplayPort; Good basic image quality
Poor vertical viewing angles; Fussy OSD and controls; There are cheaper 4K monitors
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