| Standing screen display size | 28 Inches |
|---|---|
| Screen Resolution | 3840 x 2160 |
| Max Screen Resolution | 3840 x 2160 |
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ASUS PB287Q 28" 4K/ UHD 3840x2160 1ms DisplayPort HDMI Ergonomic Back-lit LED Monitor,Black
| Screen Size | 28 Inches |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 3840 x 2160 |
| Brand | ASUS |
| Special Feature | Height Adjustment, Flicker-Free |
| Refresh Rate | 60 Hz |
| Connectivity Technology | HDMI, HDMI/MHL, DisplayPort, 3.5mm Mini-Jack |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 |
| Display Type | LED |
| Specific Uses For Product | gaming |
| Response Time | 1 Milliseconds |
About this item
- See every detail in 28-inch true 4K display with 3840 x 2160 UHD resolution, 157 pixels per inch, and real 10-bit color. Compliance and Standards- Energy Star, BSMI, CB, CCC, CE, CEL level 1, C-Tick, CU, ErP, FCC, ISO-9241-307, RoHS, TCO6.0, UL/cUL, VCCI, WEEE, WHQL (Windows 8, Windows 7)
- ASUS Eye care technology with Flicker free for less Eye fatigue; Ergonomically-designed stand with Tilt,Swivel,Pivot,Height adjustment plus wall-mount capability for comfortable viewing position. ASUS Smart Contrast Ratio (ASCR) : 100000000:1. Viewing Angle (CR≧10) : 170°(H)/160°(V)
- Swivel : +60°~-60°, pivot : 0°~+90° . Get the fastest 4K experience possible with 1ms GTG response time at Refresh Rate of 60Hz(DisplayPort),30Hz(HDMI);Security : Kensington lock.Digital Signal Frequency : 24~99 KHz(H) / 30~75 Hz(V)
- Connect to everything you own with HDMI, HDMI/MHL, and DisplayPort; Power ON (Typical): < 30.45W, Power Saving Mode : < 0.5W, Power Off Mode : < 0.5W, Voltage : 100–240V, 50 / 60 Hz
- Featuring ASUS-exclusive SplendidPlus, VividPixel, GamePlus, QuickFit technologies. ASUS Rapid Replacement: 3 Years Warranty. Adjust the contrast and brightness settings via OSD
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| Customer Rating | 4.2 out of 5 stars (986) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (3792) | 4.6 out of 5 stars (2475) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (9652) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (2073) | 4.3 out of 5 stars (3838) |
| Price | $439.99$439.99 | $349.12$349.12 | $309.00$309.00 | $314.99$314.99 | $289.00$289.00 | $299.99$299.99 |
| Sold By | MacLuvin | HNS Tech | Amazon.com | Blue Plus One | Amazon.com | Amazon.com |
| Aspect Ratio | 1.78:1 | 16:9 | — | 16:9 | 16:9 | 16:9 |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 3840 x 2160 | 3840x2160 pixels | 3840 x 2160 pixels | 3840 x 2160 pixels | 2560 x 1440 pixels | 3840 x 2160 pixels |
| Screen Size | 28 inches | 28 inches | 28 inches | 27 inches | 27 inches | 31.5 inches |
| Display Type | LED | LED | LED | LED | LCD | LED |
| Item Dimensions | 30 x 18 x 8.8 inches | 2.5 x 26 x 15 inches | 15.95 x 25.18 x 9.19 inches | 7.44 x 24.13 x 18.35 inches | 15.04 x 24.21 x 8.9 inches | 9.9 x 28.72 x 21.04 inches |
| Item Weight | 17.40 lbs | 10.10 lbs | — | 10.67 lbs | 17.00 lbs | 16.61 lbs |
| Mounting Type | VESA Compatibility - Mountable: 100 x 100 mm | VESA Compatibility - Mountable: 100 x 100 mm | Wall Mount | VESA Mounting: No | Wall Mount | Wall Mount |
| Refresh Rate | 60 hertz | 60 hertz | 60 hertz | 60 hertz | 75 hertz | 60 hertz |
| Size | 28-Inch | 28 inch | — | 27" 4K UHD | 14.6" x 24.2" x 2" | 32 Inch |
What's in the box
Product Description
Open your eyes to breath-taking levels of detail with the ASUS PB287Q True 4K ultra-high definition (4K UHD) monitor. The ASUS PB287Q features a 16:9 aspect ratio WLED display that delivers next-generation 4K UHD visuals, with resolution up to 3840 by 2160. With a pixel density of 157 pixels-per-inch (PPI), the PB287Q provides over 8 million pixels, four times the pixel density of standard Full HD displays for astonishingly detailed visuals - allowing you to experience more onscreen real estate and stunning image clarity that have to be seen to be believed. The PB287Q also delivers an impressive 1ms GTG fast response time and a 60Hz refresh rate for ultra-smooth gameplay.
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Customer Review: Glitching from day 1, dead in 4 months.
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From the manufacturer
Ready for Business
ASUS aspires to deliver the incredible in everything it does. With more than 16,000 employees around the globe and a world-class R&D team of 5,500 engineers, ASUS is dedicated to the design and manufacture of products that perfectly meet the needs of your digital lifestyle.
ASUS and the Republic of Gamers has grown to include motherboards, graphics cards, monitors, desktop PCs, all-in-one PCs, mini PCs, laptops, servers, wireless networking devices, tablets, and smartphones.
Overview
Open your eyes to breathtaking levels of detail with the ASUS PB287Q True 4K ultra-high definition (4K UHD) monitor. The ASUS PB287Q features a 16:9 aspect ratio WLED display that delivers next-generation 4K UHD visuals, with resolution up to 3840 by 2160. With a pixel density of 157 pixels-per-inch (PPI), the PB287Q provides over 8 million pixels, four times the pixel density of standard Full HD displays for astonishingly detailed visuals.
- 28” 4K UHD (3840 x 2160) display with 1ms response time and 60Hz refresh rate
- Real 10-bit color delivers smooth color gradations and natural hue transitions with
- Built-in Picture-in-Picture (PiP) and Picture-by-Picture (PbP) allow you to simultaneously view and switch between content from two sources
- Flexible connectivity with HDMI, HDMI/MHL and DisplayPort
- Flexible ergonomics with tilt, swivel, pivot and height adjustments
Features
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Impeccable 4K Ultra-high Definition VisualsThe ASUS PB287Q features a 16:9 aspect ratio WLED display that delivers next-generation 4K UHD visuals, with resolution up to 3840 by 2160. With a pixel density of 157 pixels-per-inch (PPI), the PB287Q provides over 8 million pixels, four times the pixel density of standard Full HD displays for astonishingly detailed visual. The PB287Q also delivers an impressive 1ms GTG fast response time and a 60Hz refresh rate. |
When 4K Means Seeing and Doing Much MoreWith 300% more onscreen space than standard Full HD displays, the ASUS PB287Q gives you more space to spread out your various work windows for more productive multitasking. Capable of displaying 1.07 billion colors, the PB287Q delivers outstanding color reproduction and saturation thanks to its 330cd/m² brightness and a 100,000,000:1 ASUS Smart Contrast Ratio (ASCR). |
Welcoming Prosumers and Gamers Alike to the 4K UHD Club10-bit colors means the ASUS PB287Q provides smooth color gradations for a more natural-looking transition between hues. The PB287Q also delivers an impressive 1ms (gray-to-gray) fast response time and a 60Hz refresh rate for fluid and responsive visuals needed to experience today’s games to their fullest. |
Features (Cont.)
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Innovations That Raise the BarThe PB287Q features the new SplendidPlus Video Intelligence Technology that optimizes videos and images by enhancing color brightness, contrast, and sharpness. SplendidPlus features two new modes – Reading and Darkroom – in addition to the Scenery, Standard, Theater, sRGB, and Night View modes. Low-blue Light and Flicker-free technologies also reduce the strain on your eyes after long-time usage. |
Everything You Need. Built Right InThe ASUS PB287Q features extensive connectivity options that include DisplayPort 1.2 for true 4K UHD content support at refresh rates of up to 60Hz, HDMI and a second HDMI port that supports MHL. You can also use the MHL with HDMI connection to view content from your mobile device on the PB287Q while simultaneously charging the mobile device. |
Say Hello to Extraordinary ComfortThe PB287Q features a slim profile and an ergonomically-designed stand with tilt, swivel, pivot, and height adjustments so you can always find that ideal viewing position. |
Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | ASUS |
|---|---|
| Series | PB287Q |
| Item model number | PB287Q |
| Item Weight | 17.4 pounds |
| Product Dimensions | 30 x 18 x 8.8 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 30 x 18 x 8.8 inches |
| Color | Black |
| Number of Processors | 1 |
| Computer Memory Type | DDR3 SDRAM |
| Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Manufacturer | ASUS |
| ASIN | B00KJGY3TO |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | June 10, 2014 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.2 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #178,058 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics) #3,463 in Computer Monitors |
Warranty & Support
Feedback
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on December 9, 2016
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Top reviews from the United States
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1 week using it and here is my review:
EXTERNAL LOOKS
A- Bezel frame: Thin (~1.5cm from all sides) and with matte finish. Compared to my ASUS VG278H whose frame is a bit thicker but full reflective plastic.
B- Monitor stand: Made of matte plastic, now I am guilt-free for placing the center speaker right under the monitor on its stand not fearing to scratch it.
C- Adjustment: As you probably know, you can adjust the height and tilt of the monitor (i don't care about the 90 degree rotation really), you must know this feature of height & tilt adjustment is crucial for TN type monitors to give you the best "sweet spot" to get best picture possible.
D- Function Keys: Many pro reviewers said ASUS should move the keys to the bottom instead of the weird behind the monitor new location. I agree with that. But I don't agree with the pro reviewers that this caused them to press the on/off multiple times while trying to adjust the monitor specs, this never happened with me. Lets face it, pro youtube reviewers review like 100 things a week, they go on fast and clumsy when testing so yes it does happen with them, but when you are the final owner and you adjust the monitor to your liking, this should not happen with you.
USING THIS 4K BEAST
A- TN Panel: Compared to my other ASUS VG278H (using at home) and ASUS VE278Q (using at work), this 4K monitor has excellent viewing angels like them, if not a tiny slightly hard-to-see better than them.
B- Colors: side by side as I'm writing this review, comparing this 4K with the VG278H, the 4K has more vivid & crispier colors, however the VG278H is more brighter and handles the contrast/brightness better. Is this really affecting my view? No. Any effect on gaming or regular photo viewing? No. If they weren't side by side, you won't notice. I tried to adjust both monitors to give the exact same colors but after 15 minutes I gave up, I managed to get them very close to each other, but when you see the same background on both monitors you can tell there is slight difference between the colors, but not something like WOW that's TOO much. Does it bother me? No.
C- Regular computer use (mainly browsing the Internet): I completely agree with what people said that the fonts are TOO SMALL in the 4K to the extent that they are unreadable. I have excellent eye sight (knock on wood) and I sit like 2-3 feet from the monitor, I can't read, period. So if you already own a 1080p (or 1440) monitor, DO NOT THROW IT AWAY, use it as an extended desktop monitor and open all regular windows over there. I use the 4K for viewing videos, photos and watching youtube. I have set Google Chrome to zoom its pages at +%200 so i can also watch youtube at 4K resolution (yes, apparently some youtube videos stream at 4K, never knew that!) But the catch is the Chrome tabs are SO FREAKING SMALL to read their titles! I can live with that, at least the pages content are easy to read like a regular 1080 monitor. All other Windows windows (like control panel, folder browsing, My Computer, other programs like MS Office, etc...) area dragged to be used in the 1080p monitor, then when I watch a movie or run a game, the computer will automatically use the 4K since it is the PRIMARY monitor. Even when viewing photos, it will open the photo viewer in the 4K. Basically speaking everything will open in the 4K by default, you only drag what you want to the 1080p and next time you open it, it will open there immediately.
D- Windows Scaling: I tried using the Windows scaling stuff (I have Windows 7 Ultimate 64x) but NO NO, because 1- You have lost lots of real estate space on the 4K monitor and 2- It will also scale on the 1080p which looked horrible. You can't tell Windows to scale on one monitor and forget the other. So if you have a secondary 1080 or 1440 monitor, don't use scaling and apply the techniques I described in point C above.
E- 60Hz refresh rate: My 1080p ASUS VG278H is a 120Hz monitors, many people told me you will regret going back to 60Hz. I had a theory before that I posted in a reply at one of the reviewers here in Amazon about this monitor, that the extra huge number of pixels is going to compensate me with the drop of the refresh rate. Let me tell you and it's up to you to believe me or not, YES IT DID. One simple test i did was to open a folder window, drag it to be split between the two monitors so now half of it is in the 4K @ 60Hz and the other is in the 1080p @ 120Hz, i started dragging the folder window up and down, it was smoother on the 4K! Whether you believe me or not it's up to you, but I am completely satisfied. Theoretically speaking, the 4K is almost the same physical size as the 1080 monitor (28" & 27" respectively) but packs double the amount of pixels at each axis, so when you move something across the 4K monitor, it is relatively moving slower than the 1080p thus compensates for the difference in Hz between them. Everything in the 4K monitor moves smoother (but slower area coverage for same mouse movement) than the 1080p.
F- Gaming general experience on two monitors: I won't waste time saying how games will look better on the 4K, YES THEY DO. When you game, Windows will use your 4K for the game, the other monitor will stay open on Windows desktop displaying whatever was being displayed, but your mouse pointer won't be able to go there anymore unless you exit the game. So if you are downloading a torrent or performing some activity, you can keep an "eye" on it while playing a game in the 4K monitor.
G- 4K Gaming horse power required and the 60Hz/fps limitation: As I mentioned in point E, I have not seen any difference that makes me regret gaming on 60Hz, it is not affecting the gaming experience at all and I have tested on both screens one at a time, in fact, it looks way better to game in the 4K. As for the horse power, let me tell you, 4K is not a walk-in-the-park for your computer, I have 2x SLI EVGA 780Ti Superclocked ACX cards, the twin were able to maintain a steady 60fps performance with less than AAA games or AAA games that are 2-3 years old like (Call of Duty Black Ops II, Counter Strike GO, Sim City), but on high end graphics demanding AAA games like (Watch Dogs, Assassin's Creed Black Flag) the fps averages around 45fps and i have seen it drop down to 15 when the screen gets too crowded for a second. By the way I'm talking here about full/ultra/super all-on in-game graphics settings. So to counter the low fps in these two games, I took an advice from one youtube review of this monitor which is to disable the AA in games because since you have higher PPI for the same surface area then AA is going to be smoother in games even if turned off, so I tried it and it wasn't that bad, this have increased my "worst" fps in those two games to 25 and the highest to 50fps. When any of those two games load first time, they stutter badly for the first minute or two while it is loading all the tiny graphic details like the vegetation and human faces, cars, ships (Assassin's Creed) all around your character, then the stuttering will be gone. So every time I run the game, I take my character for a 10 seconds walk around the city and drive one car till I see the stuttering has finished then enjoy a smooth game (until all hell breaks lose when 4 police cars are trying to ram my car that's when the game stutters a bit).
FINAL THOUGHTS
Do I regret spending $650 on this 4K? No. Games look superbly better, the 60Hz thing is NOT affecting gaming experience at all, period. But you MUST keep in mind you seriously need HUGE horsepower to play AAA games at full specs (minus the Anti Aliasing), otherwise if you have one 780Ti card or a lower 2-Way SLI GPUs, most likely you will need to lower game specification to get a playable game above 40-45fps. I "assume" if you have NVIDIA Titan it should be able to handle the 4K easily due to its 6Gb on board video memory, but that's a @2000+ card. Our personal photos are looking much better on the 4K, so sharp and beautiful and no longer we have to zoom in and out since almost each photo fits in the 4K frame without zooming, so you are viewing at original size on 4K, WOW. Even my wife who doesn't really care about gadgets and computers noticed that photos are much better on this 4K monitor. My only beef with this monitor that there is a tiny small grey-ish mouse-pointer-size (remember mouse pointer is twice as small in the 4K as it's in the 1080/1440) grey pixels that seem to be generating from way behind the monitor's front surface, as if it was a 3D effect, but since it is tucked at the bottom left corner (just above the Windows Start button) and when I game i never see it, I decided against sending the monitor back for replacement. I only see this tiny grey area when i have a plain white page like browsing the Internet.
If you are thinking about this monitor, go get it, you won't regret it.
EDIT 21/8/2014: Added more information, spelling and typo corrections and general formatting.
EDIT 24/8/2014: I found a proper solution for tackling the very small font of the 4K when using the monitor for regular daily use (Above point #C in reviewing the monitor use). Due to the small fonts produced by the 4K, reading Chrome tabs and the URL bar was really too difficult to handle although i set the pages themselves to zoom %200 by default as mentioned above, however many windows were being opened in the 4K monitor since it was set as my primary monitor and I found my self more and more using the 1080 screen and wasting time dragging windows to it. So since I have changed all the resolution setup inside my games to play at 4K, I did a test and found that it really did NOT matter if the Windows 7 Desktop resolution was set to 1080p on the 4K monitor as the game will STILL launch at 4K res (3840 x 2160), so now my 4K screen is locked at 1080 res on Windows Desktop and I'm using it now properly, no more dragging windows so i can read! Another advantage now I can use those two-screens themed wallpapers which looks cool since the resolution match on both monitors! I have also put all icons on the 1080p monitor and kept the 4K desktop surface clean with only the taskbar in it! Hope this update helps.
The inputs and outputs are annoying to get to. I took off the protective plastic so it would be easier to remove display port cables. This monitor has HDMI 1.4 (NOT 2.0) which means 30hz only for HDMI users. This makes it more difficult to find display port 1.2 cables that will BOTH fit in nicely with your GPU as the heads of most DisplayPort1.2 cables are THICC with two C’s and will pry apart when rubbing against each other once plugged into the back of your GPU.
This device DOES NOT SUPPORT DAISYCHAINING given the 2 HDMI 1.4 ports and the 1 DisplayPort inputs and one auxiliary input which is a VERY SCARCE amount of inputs
It does support VESA mounts but if you’re VESA mounting then this is NOT the monitor you should buy because I think a lot of the value comes from the BULKY but versatile stand that comes with the monitor. The stand is really well made but also very clunky and that is a huge minus for me. It bothers me daily since I have limit space and other controllers/interfaces/EXHDDs/Henge Docks and other things that I need to have on my desk.
Since the resolution is so rich you will need to downscale in order to see text properly and icons properly. On windows I changed the DPI to 200 I believe in display settings which was a b*** to figure out and I went to my NVIDIA graphic settings after setting the monitors to DisplayPort1.2 and changed the device to full resolution at 60hz. The reason I mentioned HDMI 1.4 is that it only supports a refresh rate of 30hz at max resolution vs HDMI 2.0 supporting 60hz. Weirdly enough, a $45 mini-dsiplay port to HDMI cable I purchased can run HDMI at 60hz on this monitors HDMI 1.4 port ODD. Linus tech tips talks about the HDMI 1.4 vs. the 2.0 in a 4.5 year old YouTube video just look this monitor up and type review at the end.
TN is not color rich like IPS but response time is significantly faster. A quick YouTube search will educate you on the difference between TN IPS and VGA or whatever.
28” is a beefy dual monitor setup. I’d recommend going 24” or smaller with IPS monitors at a lower resolution or an ultra wide with a similar but not quite as high resolution. Since you’re going to have to downscale anyways. You’ll have more screen real estate on this monitor being 4K than most, if not all, ultrawides but it will still look cleaner and more vast on the ultra wide. It’s an illusion that happens with resolutions, screen size, ppi, and the way we perceive it.
Now for MY EXPERIENCE:
I noticed that when I purchased the second monitor the back lights were different on each monitor. One gave off a purple hue and one gave off a green hue. Same colors, settings, tested multiple cables, HDMI and DisplayPort cables, multiple GPU’s, and after $117 and 2 shipments back to ASUS, 10 long phone calls, several hours of my time, and 5 emails, writing multiple RMA forums I’d have to say that ASUS does not have good customer service. ASUS HAS SOME OF THE WORST CUSTOMER SERVICE I HAVE EVER DEALT WITH AS FAR AS EFFICIENCY AND COST GOES. They are understanding and will help you with your issue but they did not send me 2 separate shipping labels for both devices. They sent me one and just couldn’t understand that. Even the d*** manager who has half a brain. I worked around it by shipping both in one box since they had to be replaced anyways. I was shocked after the first go around and $90 of shipping costs that they had sent me back a monitor with a “fixed panel” and the purple hue still was showing noticeably when comparing the monitors side by side. Better. But not fixed. They said that seemed “impossible” even though my ORIGINAL request was to replace the unit entirely. So, I opted for sending both in under the 3 year warranty and they gave me 1, not 2, free shipping labels even though they were somehow convinced they gave me 2 labels (with the same tracking number so it wasn’t registered as a different label with fedex)
ASUS scores a 0/10 for customer service from me. If I had known that this would cost me $117 dollars and hours of my time, I would’ve opted for going on amazon, clicking a button, spending more money and less time, trouble shooting the new monitors, and throwing the two I purchased away entirely.
More to note about my experience with the device that you may be intrigued by:
I wish I got 2 21.5” HP $110 IPS monitors with a VESA wall mount instead or 1 ultra wide LG-35C 38” but that was too high in price and the HP’s weren’t 4K which was what I was aiming for at the time.
I used a TABLE VESA amount and the table was from IKEA and due to the heavy nature of 2 28” monitors the mount “BIT” into the tables structure causing some instability. I also hate when the table shakes the monitors would also shake.
Playing games on this TN monitor is VERY DECENT actually although you probably don’t have a powerful enough system to game in 4K or dual 4K anyways!
This product is actually pretty good FOR WHAT IT IS and FOR THE VALUE/price. BUT, with it being 5 years old now and there being much better, cheaper, IPS monitors and even higher refresh rate TN monitors like the ASUS VG24whateverthef at 144hz, the HDMI 1.4, and the god awful customer service...
I can NOT RECOMMEND YOU BUY THIS PRODUCT.
Top reviews from other countries
If you sit with your face in the middle of the monitor, the colours look wrong by the edge. Off-white in the middle, and yellow all around the edges.
The colours are very washed out. I couldn’t get a picture of this problem - as my camera couldn’t pick it up. It’s like the gamma is wrong - but changing the gamma doesn’t help!
I hope this was just a faulty monitor - or I’m really surprised at all the good reviews everywhere.
Look at my image - on the left - a dell XPS 27, on the right ASUS PB287Q (both same resolution, same size screen).
The dell will always look pure white all over, any angle, any position.
The ASUS... well you can see. It’s not even the same colour in this picture.
You can see on the left side of the asus is as close to white as it gets (light grey), and by the right side, it’s yellow.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on May 3, 2018
If you sit with your face in the middle of the monitor, the colours look wrong by the edge. Off-white in the middle, and yellow all around the edges.
The colours are very washed out. I couldn’t get a picture of this problem - as my camera couldn’t pick it up. It’s like the gamma is wrong - but changing the gamma doesn’t help!
I hope this was just a faulty monitor - or I’m really surprised at all the good reviews everywhere.
Look at my image - on the left - a dell XPS 27, on the right ASUS PB287Q (both same resolution, same size screen).
The dell will always look pure white all over, any angle, any position.
The ASUS... well you can see. It’s not even the same colour in this picture.
You can see on the left side of the asus is as close to white as it gets (light grey), and by the right side, it’s yellow.
I used the display port cable, as my PC had that option. All easy to plug in again.
Showtime. Powered up the PC and the screen was immediately recognised and configured to 4K 60hz.. job done, as far as that bit was concerned.
Test time. Youtube - 4K Ultra HD Videos.. found a suitable one - my one of choice was landscapes and glaciers (hey, I'm a photographer so why not).. and 'Boom' there I am immersed in a crystal clear world of imagery. No pixels to see, this is like the gorgeous retina screens that Apple do so well. Colour and clarity are superb. I'm mainly going to be using this for video and photographic / graphic work so a good display is paramount.
Because of the higher resolution, tool palettes/windows are smaller giving way to larger working spaces.. in my case I went from being able to see 5 tracks of my video suite up to 12.. that's a massive improvement - especially for video work where the ability to see all clips at the same time on the timelines is pretty important.
For applications that require vector imagery, curves and lines are non-jagged and fonts are visible clearly down to the lowest font sizes, something my previous 1080 screen refused to show well.
I then gave DOOM a quick half hour bash.. which, on all the highest settings, turned what was a visually pleasing gaming experience to a showcase of CG masterdom (if that's a word). New details, reflections, contrast and clarity all pop out. Granted, my PC is new and built to be able to run high end 4K video, so why not have a decent screen to compliment it.
I seriously cannot fault it. And the 28" size is super immersive without being overpowering.
I can only imagine that the negative reviewers of this piece of kit possibly do not have a machine that's spec'ed up enough to make use of it fully.
Buy one, and marvel in the glory of a lovely experience!
Monitor is fantastic value, but you will need a fairly up-to-date graphics card to be able to drive it at it's proper 4k resolution and at 60fps. I ran it at 30 fps for a while as a test, and it wasn't very pleasant.
I quickly upgraded to a Asus GTX 1050 TI for ~£150 as a cost effective way to drive it properly via a displayport cable, instead of my older MSI GeForce GTX 560, which was good, but straight up doesn't support 4k.
It's not fair to judge it for this, but for photo editing, it's colour-accuracy isn't perfect (I did a print which looked more orange on screen, but came out more red from the printer), so not to be relied on in that respect. I won't mark it down at all for this though as that's not what its designed for, nor should it be expected to perform strongly in that area, especially at this price point. I'm just saying this for anyone who's considering it for that use. I imagine if i try and do some more earnest colour calibration on it, it may well perform better. The 4k resolution makes it much better to appreciate an images sharpness or details I have to say though. A workaround could be to buy a second low-res proper colour calibrated monitor for colour judgement, and use this screen for everything else.
Cons: It sometimes needs a minute or two to warm-up it's back-light, the config menu buttons at the back are hard to correlate with the menu options on screen. Many websites don't render great on 4K, so you're constantly zooming in to pages to be able to see it properly, but this isn't an issue with the monitor, more just a current issue for 4K itself.
Full disclosure: Got it from an Amazon Warehouse deal for a sizeable discount, apparently the packaging was damaged? To be honest the packaging was fine, and it was like new.
The Power Cable supplied was an EU 2 pin standard, so i had to cut it up and replace the plug with a UK one.
After having to create my own power cable, i connected the monitor to my PS4 Pro using the supplied HDMI cables.
I tried everything to get the PS4 Pro to work in 4K but could only get 1080P at 30hz working.
Also i purchased an adaptor to connect the HDMI to the Monitors Display Port, which would npot work at all because most DP to HDMI adaptor only work in one direction.
After get so annoyed with this Monitor, i decided to send it back.
So i file a return with Amazon.
1 Week past and no response from Ebuyer.
So i have file a claim against them.
In the meantime i have purchased a Brilliant LG Monitor LG 27UK650 27 inch 4K UHD HDR instead, Which works like a beauty with the PS4 Pro.
So buy this instead folks.
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