Aorus FI27Q-X Review – 1440p 240Hz IPS!!!

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If you’ve watched any of my monitor reviews before, you’ll know my preference for 27” 1440p high refresh rate displays. It’s just the perfect balance of pixel density, crispness and fluid and responsive gaming. It’s also the option that the vast majority of you seem rather intrigued by too. Now most high refresh rate 1440p monitors are between 144Hz and 165Hz – some peaking at 170Hz like Gigabyte’s M27Q, and the rare 240Hz ones tend to me VA panels which aren’t fantastic. But this, the FI27Q-X from Aorus, well if this doesn’t get you excited… I’m not sure anything will. This is a 1440p, 240Hz, IPS panel. Oh yeah. And it’s sweet. Lets take a look at it and see just how sweet. But first, if you haven’t already, consider subscribing for more videos like this one every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

This is the Aorus FI27Q-X, the bigger brother to the -P I’ve reviewed already, link in the cards above. This takes the reigns as one of the best high end 1440p monitors on the market, not only sporting 240Hz on an IPS panel, but quoted 100% AdobeRGB coverage making it the perfect all-rounded. They even quote a 0.3ms response time, although that is laughably false. In my testing, black to white, it takes the panel around 3ms to change colours. And going from white to black, that’s more like 10ms. Luckily, that doesn’t lead to much ghosting at all, as with overdrive set to its maximum ‘speed’ setting, there is next to no trail behind the UFO. It’s impressive just how fast this is, and how smooth it can be at 240Hz.

If you are wondering about input lag, this one isn’t too bad. Measuring with my Time Sleuth, it reported a hair over 2ms at the top of the display which definitely isn’t bad. A number of other monitors I’ve tested offered 0.5-1ms, like the Acer VG271UP, but 2ms is hardly terrible. That translates to roughly 25ms of total system input lag which again isn’t the lowest I’ve seen but is definitely acceptable.

Of course, you will need a pretty powerful GPU to run this, especially in anything other than CSGO, but if that’s what you play, even the RX 480 that I’ve got strapped to the bottom of this desk does fine. Speaking of CSGO, the playing experience on this is incredible. The combination of crisp visuals and smooth motion makes this one of the best gaming experiences I’ve had in a while. I was hitting shots I wouldn’t normally, my accuracy was definitely better than normal and while it doesn’t exactly help your game sense or gun control, it definitely helps you get those flick shots with an AWP.

While I’m still not sure I’d personally spend my money on a 240Hz panel over a 144Hz or 165Hz one, especially when you can buy the lower hertz ones for literally half the price, I can’t deny this is a great monitor. One feature that does seem to be missing that would make this the true ultimate in class is the ability to enable ‘aim stabilizer’ AKA backlight strobing while Freesync is active. It’s something a few models of Asus monitors have and should help with the white to black time, although if this was mine I personally wouldn’t enable it as I get headaches from backlight strobing. The panel is fast enough to not really need it, so it’s not a big deal, but would be nice to see if they could implement it.

As for the rest of the monitor, it’s pretty much identical to the FI27Q-P. It’s got a bit of RGB on the back, both on the stand and the back of the display. It’s not too in your face, and you can disable it in the menu so no big deal. The stand has plenty of adjustment including tilt, swivel, height adjust and rotation for portrait mode. You’ve got a VESA mount hidden under the stand mount, and plenty of IO. You have headphone and microphone jacks, two HDMI ports and one DisplayPort, and a two port USB 3 hub, so enough for both new consoles and a gaming PC – perfect.

Colours wise, I couldn’t get this to run the full 100% AdobeRGB it quotes, nor it’s 93% DCI P3 with the closest I got being 87% DCI P3 but I’d chalk that up to my SpyderX and the colour settings – there are a lot of options here and you’d need to spend a day tinkering to get it perfect, but as-is I’d be plenty happy to edit on this. It’s a vibrant display with rich colours and decent brightness for SDR content. It’s lacking brightness if HDR is your thing with a peak brightness of 400 nits, but I’m not exactly bothered by that personally so for me that’s fine. It’s pretty remarkable that a 240Hz 1440p gaming monitor can also be such a good option for content creators too, and considering it’s only £100 more than the 165Hz -P version, well it seems like a great shout.

I’d be happy to run this as my primary monitor, although I wouldn’t end up getting much benefit from it being 240Hz as the vast majority of games I play run at 100-140FPS on my 2080. I’d need a 3080 to see high enough performance to really benefit, and we all know how hard it is to get one of those right now.

So, if you are looking for the ultimate 1440p gaming monitor, look no further. This is what you are after. It’s a stunning display with a great gaming experience, and it’s not heinously expensive over it’s more ‘standard’ 165Hz counterpart. Good job Aorus.

  • TechteamGB Score
4.8