ASUS Launches VG245Q 'Console' Gaming Monitor: 1080p with FreeSync, $200
by Anton Shilov on April 4, 2017 4:00 PM ESTASUS has introduced another monitor positioned specifically for console gaming that allows console owners to take their games out of the living room. The new display offers Full-HD resolution and uses an inexpensive TN panel with a fast response time, supporting a refresh rate of 40Hz to 75Hz. It features AMD’s FreeSync technology as well as a DisplayPort port, so while this is aimed at more console type gaming, in order to use Freesync it essentially has to be a 'console' PC rather than an actual console.
The ASUS VG245Q display uses a 24” TN panel with 1920×1080 resolution, and the general specifications are typical for budget devices: 250 nits brightness, 170°/160° viewing angles, a 1 ms response time (grey-to-grey) and so on. The monitor comes with two 2 W speakers and has two HDMI (so to connect to two consoles), one DisplayPort and one D-Sub connector. The VG245Q can adjust its height, swivel, and pivot. One of the important selling points of the ASUS VG245-series monitors is support for AMD’s FreeSync dynamic framerate technology that works at refresh rates ranging from 40 to 75 Hz.
In fact, ASUS’ VG245 family of displays, aimed at 'console' gaming, now includes three models: the VG245Q (introduced this month), the VG245H, and the VG245HE, with the latter two launched last fall. All the monitors use the same panel and have slightly different feature sets. The VG245H uses the same chassis as the VG245Q, but lacks DisplayPort. Meanwhile, the VG245HE is the most simplistic in the lineup, as it does not have swivel, pivot or height adjustments.
ASUS VG245-Series Console Gaming Monitors | ||||
ASUS VG245H (Added Adjust) |
ASUS VG245HE (Base Model) |
ASUS VG245Q (FreeSync) |
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Panel | 24" TN | |||
Native Resolution | 1920 × 1080 | |||
Refresh Rate Range | 75 Hz | 75 Hz | 40-75 Hz | |
Response Time | 1 ms (gray-to-gray) | |||
Brightness | 250 cd/m² | |||
Contrast | '100000000:1' ASUS |
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Viewing Angles | 170°/160° horizontal/vertical | |||
Color Saturation | 72% NTSC sRGB mode available |
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Inputs | 2 × HDMI 1 × D-Sub |
2 × HDMI 1 × D-Sub 2 × DP |
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Audio | 2 × 2 W speakers Audio in/out ports |
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Proprietary Enhancements | Trace Free Technology GamePlus Modes: Crosshair/Timer/Display Alignment Low Blue Light: Yes GameVisual Modes: Scenery/Racing/Cinema/RTS/RPG/FPS/sRGB |
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Mechanical | Chassis Color | Black | ||
Tilt | +33°~-5° | |||
Swivel | -90°~+90° | - | -90°~+90° | |
Pivot | +90°~-90° | - | +90°~-90° | |
Height Adjustment | 0~130 mm | - | 0~130 mm | |
VESA Wall Mounting | 100 × 100 mm | |||
Power Consumption |
Idle | ~0.5 W | ||
Active | 40 W | |||
Detailed Information | Link | Link | Link |
While ASUS formally positions its VG245-series displays as reasonably priced solutions for consoles, these devices are cheaper gaming monitors carrying the ASUS brand. They enable the company to address the entry-level segment of the PC market (keep in mind that the sRGB is supported as a feature of the ASUS GameVisual menu) without distracting attention of the masses from the higher-end models with advanced specs and features.
ASUS has not announced precise MSRP for its VG245Q monitor, but at present, the VG245H can be acquired for $179.99. It is unlikely that the addition of a DisplayPort connector significantly affected the cost of the VG245Q vs. the VG245H and it is logical to expect the two products to cost about the same.
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Source: ASUS
33 Comments
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meacupla - Thursday, April 6, 2017 - link
Asus' RoG, G-sync 144Hz gaming monitor impressed me, despite being a TN panel.Yes, the viewing angles are not that good, but the color reproduction was even better than cheap IPS/MVA panels. (and I am spoiled by Surface Pro 4's excellent screen)
What impressed me most, was the low input lag and excellent ghosting reduction, which helps a lot when playing faster paced games.
What seriously needs to go are bottom of the barrel TN panels, because some of them are simply unusable when they're used on laptops. I am talking about color inversion at arm's length, which is just stupid on a laptop. (It was a Lenovo X130e and that thing totally ruined any further purchases from them)
garbagedisposal - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
Overpriced and stupid. You can already get ~20 inch 1080p IPS panels with freesync for 100$ every day from amazon. Was this posted because it's TN which makes it magically faster?zodiacfml - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
Same thoughts here. I think there is a price premium once they attached the word "gaming" to their productsChaitanya - Wednesday, April 5, 2017 - link
You are forgetting the tax on that crap for Asus Badge thats slapped on it.PseudoKnight - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
I did a general search on Amazon for "IPS freesync" and didn't get anywhere near $100. Cheapest was $165. Amazon search must suck.Holliday75 - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
I found a mistake. "ASUS stupid smart contrast ratio" with stupid crossed out. Get rid of the cross out on stupid and remove smart.DanNeely - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
That's deliberate commentary on the utterly beyond BS numbers ASUS's marketing dept is lying about.boozed - Tuesday, April 4, 2017 - link
Ooh, what's the awful looking FPS in the "serving suggestion" product shot there?MattMe - Wednesday, April 5, 2017 - link
"ASUS stupid contrast ratio" :)docofkult - Wednesday, April 5, 2017 - link
You have made a type in the inputs section. VG245Q does not have 2 DisplayPorts.