ASUS VA326H and VA326N-W: 31.5-Inch Curved 144 Hz FHD Displays for $399
by Anton Shilov on December 16, 2016 10:00 AM ESTASUS has introduced two new curved gaming displays that feature large 31.5” VA panels with a 144 Hz refresh rate. The VA326H and VA326N-W monitors have FHD resolution as well as a variety of ASUS’ enhancements designed for gamers. ASUS positions the new products as entry-level models for gamers in budget that also demand a large diagonal, curvature and a high refresh rate.
The ASUS VA326-series displays use 31.5” AHVA panels with 1920×1080 resolution and 16:9 aspect ratio. General specifications of the monitors are typical for this class of devices: 300 nits brightness, 3000:1 contrast ratio, 178°/178° viewing angles, a 4 ms response time (grey-to-grey) and so on. The main selling points of the two displays are their 144 Hz refresh rate as well as 1800R curvature.
The only difference between the ASUS VA326H and the ASUS VA326N-W monitors is the supported connectors: both come with a D-Sub and a DL-DVI input, whereas the VA326H also has an HDMI 1.4 header. The displays lack features like a USB hub as well as integrated speakers, which is expected for entry-level consumer devices.
ASUS VA326-Series Curved Gaming Monitors | |||
ASUS VA326H | ASUS VA326N-W | ||
Panel | 31.5 AHVA | ||
Native Resolution | 1920 × 1080 | ||
Refresh Rate Range | 144 Hz via HDMI, DL-DVI 50~75 Hz via D-Sub |
144 Hz via DL-DVI 50~75 Hz via D-Sub |
|
Response Time | 4 ms (gray-to-gray) | ||
Brightness | 300 cd/m² | ||
Contrast | 3000:1 | ||
Viewing Angles | 178°/178° horizontal/vertical | ||
Curvature | 1800R | ||
Inputs | 1 × HDMI 1.4 with HDCP 1 × DL-DVI with HDCP 1 × D-Sub |
- 1 × DL-DVI with HDCP 1 × D-Sub with HDCP |
|
Audio | Audio in/out ports | ||
Proprietary Enhancements | Trace Free Technology Skin-Tone Selection: 3 Modes Color Temperature Selection: 4 Modes GamePlus Modes: Crosshair/Timer/Display Alignment Low Blue Light: Yes VividPixel: Yes GameVisual Modes: Scenery/Racing/Cinema/RTS/RPG/FPS/sRGB |
||
Power Consumption |
Idle | ~5 W | |
Active | 28 W at 200 cd/m² | ||
Detailed Information | Link | Link |
The ASUS VA326-series displays formally belong to the company’s Essential family of inexpensive monitors and are the first curved screens in this lineup. Nevertheless, they support a refresh rate of up to 144 Hz as well as ASUS’ proprietary enhancements like Trace Free, Crosshair, Timer and others, which are valued primarily by gamers. In fact, the combination of a large size, a 144 Hz refresh rate, and curvature, combine into an interesting package for this particular price point and will likely appeal to gamers in budget. These gamers might be focused on eSports, therefore a relatively low resolution of 1920×1080 pixels is not going to be a drawback for them, but will rather be an advantage because they will be able to play with a native resolution with high FPS and at 144 Hz.
ASUS plans to start sales of the VA326H and VA326N-W monitors in early Q1 2017. In the U.S., the company will offer the ASUS VA326H for $399. MSRP for Europe and other countries are unknown, but given the positioning of the displays and their price in the U.S., the ASUS VA326-series monitors will be rather affordable.
Related Reading:
- AOC Launches the AG352QCX: 35-Inch 200 Hz 2560×1080 Curved Display with Adaptive-Sync
- Samsung CFG70: Curved 144Hz Displays with Quantum Dot Backlighting and AMD FreeSync
- LG Announces the 34UC79G: 34-Inch Curved 21:9 Display with 2560 × 1080 Resolution, 144 Hz Refresh Rate for $700
- Acer’s Announces Predator Gaming Displays with Tobii Eye-Tracking Technology, Up to 240 Hz Refresh Rate
- Dell Unveils UltraSharp U3417W: Makes Its Curved Display More Curved
Source: ASUS
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hojnikb - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
No freesync no buyInteli - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
To be fair, is FreeSync really necessary at 1080p?ToTTenTranz - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
There's always virtual resolution + downsampling.And regardless, monitors are supposed to last very long, so even people with a Pascal Titan X might eventually have to tone down to 1080p within 4-5 years or something.
DanNeely - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
144hz is probably the bigger reason it doesn't matter as much. The maximum timing mismatch between rendering and display is 7ms instead of 16.7, making tearing artifacts visible for a much shorter period if vsync is off and extra latency much smaller if vsync is enabled.p1esk - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
If someone offered me this monitor for free, I would not take it. Seriously.AnotherGuy - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
U guys are being obnoxious for no reason. Take a quick look how much cost 144hz curved 32" screens... they are all from $450-$1000Ukyo - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
You tell `em!Inteli - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
And tell me how many of those are higher resolution than 1920x1080. My guess would be every single one.doggface - Sunday, December 18, 2016 - link
Yep. Agree."I don't understand why anyone would want anything I don't..?"
evilspoons - Friday, December 16, 2016 - link
Gross, 32" 1080p? My Nexus 6P has more pixels than this. I was at least expecting 2560x something.