It's here, after 2 years of waiting and anticipation, the high-end 35" ultrawide gaming screen from Asus. With a 3440 x 1440 resolution VA panel, at 200Hz and with a FALD backlight for HDR 1000 support. An exclusive first review!
It's here, after 2 years of waiting and anticipation, the high-end 35" ultrawide gaming screen from Asus. With a 3440 x 1440 resolution VA panel, at 200Hz and with a FALD backlight for HDR 1000 support. An exclusive first review!
The Asus ROG Swift PG35VQ isn't an easy product to summarise. It is very late to market, hugely expensive, and carries a lengthy list of caveats that dampen its appeal as the ultimate gaming monitor.
3,440x1,440 at up to 200Hz; Nvidia G-Sync Ultimate certification; Impressive HDR performance; Makes games look and feel amazing; Intuitive controls
Fan noise; Huge £2,700 price tag; Undesirable FALD halo effect; DP 1.4 prevents 10-bit HDR at 200Hz
It wasn't long ago that the 24in Full HD screen was the sweet spot for gaming. But size and resolution have been inflating in the last couple of years, and we've started to see a flow of curved ultrawide screens with a 21:9 aspect ratio. The ASUS ROG SWIFT PG35VQ sits at the pinnacle of this trend.
200Hz refresh-rate; NVIDIA G-sync Ultimate; HDR-10 support up to 1,000cd/m2 brightness; Excellent colour accuracy; and even better when calibrated; Immersive 35in 3,440 x 1,440 21:9 superwidescreen; Curved panel; Gaming-focused presets; Built-in ESS Sabre HiFi audio DAC; Useful extra gaming...
Incredibly expensive; Need to turn on Wide Gamut even if you're not using a Mac
Incredible quality, 200Hz G-Sync, top-notch HDR and a 35-inch widescreen. It's expensive, but the PG35VQ delivers a near-perfect gaming experience.
Incredible, smooth gaming with 200Hz G-Sync and HDR; Fantastic image quality; Bold design with RGB LEDs; Huge, curved screen with high resolution;
Not the best port selection; Outrageously expensive; Occasional blurring and haloing;
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