Which 1440p 144hz Monitor to Buy

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There are a lot of 1440p 144hz monitors around, I’ve reviewed a fair few of them in the last few months alone, so I’d understand if you are sat looking at your Amazon basket with 4 or 5 different options and confused on which to get.

Now I should mention that I haven’t tested every option out there, and I’m liable to miss a few in this video, so if there is one in particular you are after and I don’t cover it here, let me know in the comments below and I’ll do my best to give it a once over. With that said, let’s jump in.

So I want to break this down into a few categories, the best “budget” option, the best all round, the best IPS and the, well, best. Lets start with the budget offerings.

These come to us in a few different forms, in the UK you’ll find them as “Element Gaming” displays from Ebuyer, in the USA you’ll find Korean brands like “MBEST” and very similar import brands all over the world.

These are basically OEM monitors – original engineering and manufacture – basically generic monitors that get a logo sticker on as they are shipped out the door. These aren’t the best monitors in the world, they can have some quality issues, and won’t be the most colour accurate, or have the best viewing angles, but they do play games rather well.

They normally use TN panels, which are fast, but come at the cost of colour reproduction and viewing angles, which for the low low price of £230 here in the UK, or about $260 in the USA, isn’t a bad trade off.

Moving up the scale to the best all rounder, this one is actually another recent review, that is the new MSI model, with the nice easy to remember name, MAG271CQR. This one, like the generic ones I mentioned earlier, has FreeSync/Adaptive Sync, meaning you get a nice smooth gaming experience, but differs from the budget options with it’s VA panel and much nicer build quality and stand.

It’s VA panel retains the speed and response times of the TN’s before it, but gains a healthy amount of viewing angles and colour accuracy. It’s a very nice monitor, and is selling for around £400. For me, this is the best all rounder.

If you aren’t satisfied with that though and need even better colour accuracy and viewing angles, this time at the expense of some response times, you can grab the Gigabyte AD27QD. It’s still an adaptive sync display, but now features an IPS panel and somewhere around 95% accuracy of the DCI-P3 spectrum. Pretty nice. It’s a bit more premium, at around £530, but if you value colour accuracy, it’s great.

Now I know I mentioned that I’d cover a separate “best of the best” model here, but really I’d say it’s a bit of a tie. The Asus PG279Q and the newer QZ model only really edge out the Aorus AD27QD in that they have the “full fat” Gsync module, which in theory gives an ever so slightly better experience and Gsync + HDR, but in reality isn’t all that much better. They are very, very similar monitors, except that the Asus model is well over £100 more than the Aorus, making it, for me anyway, not worth picking up.

So, lets round it up then. If you’ve got little money but want in the 1440p 144hz club, grab your local Korean import monitor – Element Gaming, MBEST, whatever it may be with you. If you’ve want the best all rounder, the MSI MAG271CQR is where to head. Want an IPS option? Get the Gigabyte AD27QD. And want to blow your money on a very minimal improvement? Asus is ready and waiting with their PG279’s.

MSI MAG271CQR: http://techteamgb.co.uk/msimag271cqr
Asus PG279Q: http://techteamgb.co.uk/pg279q
Gigabyte AD27QD: http://techteamgb.co.uk/ad27qd
MBEST: http://techteamgb.co.uk/mbest1440p

Element Gaming: http://techteamgb.co.uk/eg1440p

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