In the madness of the existing PC Monitor market, it is difficult to know what matters. There are so many options, so many techniques and features to choose from.


This is especially true when it comes to gaming panels. Do you need 144Hz refresh, maybe even 240Hz? Is adaptive sync necessary and if so, should G-sync or Freescan be the target for you? Should there be a facility in HDR? And what about size, aspect ratio, resolution and curvature? In the account, there is a lot to make sure.


     Asus ROG Strix XG35VQ for $ 760 on Amazon


In that sense, ASUS's ROG Strex XG35VQ has cut off its work. This is not the biggest and bold gaming monitor, which you can get across 35 inches. It is not the highest resolution gaming panel that you can buy 1,440 pixels for 3,440 rupees, or the highest fresh at 100Hz. This is not HDR certified. For example, ASUS's own ROG Swift PG27UQ and Acer's Predator X27 combines 4K with 144Hz and HDR.




Asus ROG Strix XG35VQ Review



Asus ROG Design

The Axis 35VAC is aesthetically more chip than the ASUS ROG block. This means that it is bad together and it's bad at all, but just a teenager from Styling's perspective.

For example, features like LED-powered light signature displaying the Asus logo just below the monitor's stand are very few for gaming experience, but essentially openly contribute at a higher price. Light the mood of the aura on the reading of the screen attachment.

He said, the upside is a very solid feeling and a sense of well spent money. It is also widely applied on technology as well. In this example, Asus has opted for a VA LCD panel, which bells well for image quality elements such as contrast and color saturation, if angle is less to see and respond.

The fact is that Asus only claims 4ms for the gray-to-gray response time of XG35VQ, possibly a function of that VA panel. Asus boasts the capacity of 1ms through its extreme low motion blur technique, but it requires relatively extreme measures which compensate for the relative slowing of the panel.

Similarly, considering the VA panel technique, it is not a big deal to find out the rate refreshed at 100 Hz. This is a significant increase on 60Hz criteria for non-gaming panels.

However, it looks a little undercover in the age of 144Hz and even 240Hz gaming monitors. That said, you get adaptive refresh in the form of AMD's FreeSync technology.

What's more, thank you for the recent step by unlidding your video card for FreeSync, you can buy XG35VQ securely in this knowledge that its adaptive refreshing functionality will work with whatever graphics board you have, Nvidia Or AMD. It can not be said that Asus had specified XG35VQ with Nvidia-only G-Sync technology.


 In other places, the 35-inch 21: 9 aspect panel has been played by good thin beadles on three sides, 1800r curvature on rocks and 1,440 native races by 3,440. This resolution is a good agreement between expansion and performance.

4K is great in theory. But it puts a heavy burden on your graphics subsystem. By giving some pixels, you can play easily without the need for $ 1,000 / £ 1,000-plus video card.



 Asus Price and availability



 Despite being available for some time, ROG Strix XG35VQ is still insisting on Beef $ 760 (£ 730, AU $ 1,059) Price tag. For the purpose of gamers like LG 34UC79G it is expensive compared to other 34 and 35-inch wide aspect monitors.



Asus ROG Performance 


 The HDR is not a certified monitor, but the immediate visual effect of the ASUS ROG Strex XG 35VQ is equal to the lower end of the HDR spectrum, for example the panel with the display HDR 400 certification.

The 35-inch VA panel helps with strong underlying contrast and perforated, thanks to saturated shades.

In terms of pure accuracy, of course, we have seen better than XG35VQ. In the default factory calibration, there are some evidence of compression in both black and white scales. Viewing angles do not scare the best IPS instead of VA-based monitors.


However, in the real world, those niggles have a relatively small effect, whether it is gaming or working in Windows. In fact, XG35VQ's 100 Hz refresh in subjective terms gives you the most characterless and intuitive experience, usually associated with 144 Hz and fast panel. Yes, it is possible to speak in a thematic way between 100Hz and 144Hz, but it is a relatively subtle difference.


As a reaction, Asus has coded five pixel pixels in the clean and accessible OSD menu of XG35VQ. Correct the overdrive and a slightly ugly upside down ghost is visible. Set it around halfway and the result is a quick and responsive panel, especially considering the VA underpinning.

For the record, FreeSync functionality of XG35VQ worked directly out of the box with our Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080-powered test rig, which is very good to see and it is more attractive that the conditions of the previous cases "adaptive refresh" one or the other Was closed for GPU Dealer

Work together with 1800r curvature and 35-inch ratio and you have a very hot gaming panel. It's fast, it's sleek and it looks porous.


Undoubtedly, Asus has lowered the XG35VQ with the oodles of image presets, most of which would sample it. He said, sRGB presets can work for any person planning a dual purpose on this monitor, and not just playing games but doing something like serious content creation.

Keeping this in mind, 3,440 by a 1,440 resolution is a fair agreement. This means that a mid-to-upper tier graphics card, such as the Nvidia Geforce GTX 1070 or RTX 2060, will allow the desktop to refresh the 100Hz, allowing the appropriate amount of workplace space.


 Asus ROG   Verdict


As a pure gaming panel, Asus ROG Strex XG 35VQ is a lot for this, but there is a big problem in working against it. The latter is the price. It is expensive, even considering the experience on offer.

For example, LG 34UC79G has the same resolution, a 144Hz IPS panel, which is an inch smaller and costs $ 200 less. This sand looks like a more expensive product. But this is not really good for gaming and in some it is small on the imagination.

With that all, ROG Strix XG35VQ is a great gaming monitor that has quite a serious pricing problem.



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