King of the Hill
The ROG Strix XG27AQNGV is the perfect esports gaming monitor for fast-paced FPS games. This QHD (2560 x 1440) display features Ultrafast IPS panel technology that supports 360Hz visuals and an NVIDIA® G-SYNC® processor with G-Sync Pulsar technology provides the best motion clarity, combined with smooth G-SYNC Variable Refresh Rate for tear-free immersion with super accurate colors and low latency HDR.
Features
The New Esports Standard
The Fastest Response Time Of All 1440p Monitors
NVIDIA G-SYNC
Refresh Rate
G-SYNC Pulsar
Motion Clarity
G-SYNC Ambient Adaptive
Day & Night
Esports Dual-Mode
G-SYNC Pulsar
The Ultimate Motion Clarity
For more precise aiming and sharper, clearer gameplay, G-SYNC Pulsar utilizes variable frequency backlight strobing to deliver 4x effective motion clarity, together with smooth G-SYNC Variable Refresh Rate.
G-SYNC Pulsar Off
G-SYNC Pulsar On
The Fastest Response Time Of All 1440p Monitors
Ultrafast IPS Technology
Three key features define the ASUS Ultrafast IPS technology that gives the it the fastest response time ever. It’s built to crush motion blur and give gamers unprecedented clarity ― even in the fast-moving battlefields of today’s esports competitions.
New Liquid Crystal
A new kind of liquid crystal offers higher birefringence and lower viscosity, allowing the liquid crystals to twist quickly and make space for light to pass through.
Optimized Orientation
The flow pattern of the new liquid crystals has been optimized for efficiency. Previously, the crystals were lined up parallel to the polarizer surface. The new arrangement allows the liquid crystals to turn faster for a faster response time.
Dual-Layer Voltage Driver
Conventional displays use a single-layer voltage driver to twist the liquid crystals from the upper left to the bottom-right corner. The XG27AQNGV features a new dual-layer voltage driver design, so the liquid crystals twist from the upper-left and bottom-right corners simultaneously for a smoother, more consistent image.
Ultra-Responsive Performance
NVIDIA G-SYNC
The NVIDIA® G-SYNC® processor gives you more of what you want in a gaming experience. Experience incredibly smooth, tear-free gameplay at refresh rates of up to 360Hz, plus ultra-low motion blur.
G-SYNC Ambient Adaptive Technology
Looks Great, Day & Night
G-SYNC Ambient Adaptive Technology utilizes a built-in light sensor to give you the option to automatically tune color temperature and brightness for optimal viewing at any hour of the day or night.
25ʺ Visuals at 1080p
Esports Dual Mode
Play at a more familiar 25ʺ diagonal size at 1080p, or enable Esports Dual Mode in the settings to play at an even sharper 2368 x 1332 resolution. With almost no perceivable latency difference in Dual Mode, the Strix XG27AQNGV delivers the lowest latency in its class for best first-person shooter experiences.

In−Game Enhancements

Rich Connectivity
Extensive connectivity options include DisplayPort™ 1.4, two HDMI® 2.1, and earphone jack, supporting a wide array of multimedia devices.
Focusing on What Matters Most
Product Design
XG27AQNGV features a new compact stand that’s 30% smaller than those found on previous-generation XG monitors, freeing up valuable desk space for a keyboard and mouse. The stand offers tilt, swivel, and height adjustments for the ideal viewing position. The display is also VESA wall-mount-compatible.
FAQ
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The choice depends on your primary game genre.
- For Competitive Players (FPS): Refresh Rate is the priority. High refresh rate monitors provide fast and smooth visuals for increased responsiveness and motion clariy. That all adds up to a measurable advantage in games like Valorant or Counter-Strike 2.
- For Immersion Players (AAA): Resolution is key. 4K (3840 x 2160) is now the baseline for cinematic experiences, offering extreme detail for titles like Cyberpunk 2077 or the latest Unreal Engine 5 releases.
- The "Sweet Spot": 1440p at 240Hz remains the most balanced configuration for most gamers, offering sharp visuals without requiring an ultra-high-end GPU.
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Each panel serves a specific use case based on environment and performance needs:
- OLED: OLED gaming monitors offer infinite contrast for perfect blacks and a near-instantaneous 0.03ms response time, giving you a premium visual experience in any type of game.
- IPS: Most of today’s budget-friendly gaming monitors use IPS panels, but their advantages go far beyond affordability. IPS panels are known for exceptional color consistency and viewing angles, and they’re available with very high refresh rates.
- Mini-LED: Mini-LED gaming monitors provide extreme peak brightness (1000+ nits) and localized dimming for vibrant highlights, making them a compelling pick for gamers chasing premium HDR experiences.
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They represent different ways a screen handles light and color:
- OLED: In an OLED panel, every pixel is its own light source. This allows for "True Black" because pixels can turn completely off. This panel type is the gold standard for speed and contrast.
- IPS: An IPS panel uses liquid crystals aligned in rows to produce consistent color. This panel type is trusted for excellent color accuracy and wide viewing angles. These characteristics make it perfect if you’re sharing the screen or doing creative work alongside gaming.
- VA: VA panels use crystals aligned vertically to block light more effectively. This allows VA panels to offer better native contrast than IPS types thanks to deeper blacks. However, these panels aren’t always preferred for fast-paced gaming due to a “dark smearing” effect.
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The "best" size is determined by your viewing distance, resolution, and the type of games you play. The most competitive esports gamers tend to prefer smaller 24-inch or 25-inch monitors that allow them to keep the entire screen in the center of their field of vision. This makes sure that they don’t miss a thing on the minimap or in the periphery of their vision.
Larger 32-inch monitors provide a cinematic experience that pairs well for lavish AAA spectacles, role-playing games, and immersive sims. They’re perfect for 4K and dual-mode setups where you want a large canvas for cinematic immersion. Ultrawide and super-ultrawide monitors extend horizontally to fill more of the periphery of your vision. They’re often preferred by racing sim enthusiasts, but also cater to multitaskers and gamers who prioritize immersion.
The “sweet spot” for most gamers is a 27-inch monitor size. Big enough to feel immersive yet compact enough to keep all the action in the center of your field of view, 27-inch monitors offer a great experience in any game. Many gamers find that 1440p 27-inch monitors offer a compelling balance of detail and pixel density. Since most mainstream graphics cards can produce very high FPS at this resolution, it’s a great fit for most gamers’ setups, too.
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Absolutely—if the hardware supports it. HDR (High Dynamic Range) expands the range between the brightest whites and darkest blacks, allowing for looming shadows and dazzling highlights that make every frame feel more true to life.
- DisplayHDR 400: This is the entry point for the ratings system, and it indicates that a monitor provides a welcome boost in brightness, contrast, and color performance over comparable standard monitors.
- DisplayHDR 600/1000: A monitor with one of these ratings delivers what many would call the "Real HDR" experience, requiring local dimming zones for high-contrast impact.
- DisplayHDR True Black (400/500/600): This group of ratings is exclusive to OLED panels, giving gamers an easy tool for comparing the performance of different OLED gaming monitors. These ratings better account for the incredible depth of black levels on OLED panels rather than focusing on raw brightness.
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ELMB (Extreme Low Motion Blur) is ASUS’s proprietary strobing technology that eliminates motion blur for "CRT-like" clarity. ELMB works at a fixed refresh rate (e.g., exactly 144Hz), and is best used with game settings that allow for a very stable FPS. ELMB Sync is the evolution of the technology. It allows ELMB strobing to work simultaneously with Variable Refresh Rate technologies like G-SYNC and FreeSync. This gives you the best of both worlds by eliminating screen tearing and minimizing motion blur, even as your frame rate fluctuates naturally over time.
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"Overdrive" is a technique exclusive to LCD gaming monitors that pushes pixels to change colors faster to reduce motion blur. However, a fixed overdrive setting that looks great at 240 FPS might cause "overshoot" (disturbing halos around moving objects) if your frame rate drops to 60 FPS.
Variable Overdrive is an advanced form of the technique that intelligently adjusts the overdrive level in real-time, ensuring that you get reduced blur without distracting visual artifacts, even as your frame rate fluctuates. Found in many ROG and TUF Gaming monitors from ASUS, Variable Overdrive gives you clear images with zero ghosting or overshoot.
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Yes. Both PS5 and Xbox Series X/S support VRR via HDMI 2.1. This eliminates screen tearing and stuttering, making games feel smoother even if the frame rate isn't perfectly stable. All ASUS and ROG HDMI 2.1 monitors are fully compatible.
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Dual-Mode is a revolutionary feature that allows a single monitor to switch between two distinct performance profiles—typically a high-resolution mode and a high-refresh-rate mode. It achieves this by combining four pixels into one (pixel binning) to prioritize speed, or using every individual pixel to prioritize detail.
- The Benefit for Gamers: You get the best of both worlds. You can enjoy a cinematic, immersive experience in AAA titles (like Black Myth: Wukong or Cyberpunk 2077) and then instantly switch to a "pro-speed" mode for Competitive FPS (like Valorant or Apex Legends).
This is a massive cost and space saver. Instead of buying two different monitors, one ROG Dual-Mode monitor handles every genre perfectly.
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ROG OLED displays are factory-calibrated to achieve a high level of color accuracy. Color accuracy is typically measured by an average delta E value, with value less than two indicating that the human generally cannot distinguish the difference between the color on the screen and the reference color. Creative professionals are the most demanding users when it comes to color accuracy, but accurate monitors also give gamers the ability to experience games just as their developers intended.
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For the highest possible performance in 2026, the specific version and bandwidth matter.
- DisplayPort 2.1 is the current performance king. Look specifically for DP2.1a with UHBR20 support, which provides a massive 80Gbps bandwidth. This is the best fit for today’s high-end graphics cards, which support DisplayPort 2.1 output.
- HDMI 2.1 ports are preferred for console gaming (PS5/Xbox) and for high-end gaming on a TV, but the connector type is capped at 48Gbps. For this reason, gamers tend to use DisplayPort 2.1a for PC gaming and HDMI 2.1 for consoles or secondary media devices.
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As with many choices with your gaming monitor, this depends on your environment and usage. For most gamers today, we tend to recommend a budget OLED gaming monitor since even an affordable OLED offers cutting-edge visuals with premium motion clarity, true-to-life-colors, and the panel type’s signature inky blacks. If you’re looking to buy one monitor that you’ll love for years, OLED is the clear winner in most scenarios.
That said, the older IPS technology still has a place on the desks of many gamers. If your monitor will see hours of use for productivity or coding tasks in a room with a high ambient light level, you might prefer an extra-bright IPS monitor, perhaps a model with a mini-LED backlight. IPS monitors are also available for very attainable prices, making them a common choice for budget PC gaming setups.


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