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Tom's Guide
20-05-2025
- Tom's Guide
I saw a 500Hz QD-OLED monitor in action — and it was as fast as it was colorful
Imagine not having to sacrifice picture quality and brightness for speed. Well, that's exactly what MSI has done with its new 500Hz QD-OLED gaming monitor, which also has a nice trick up its sleeve to take the hassle out of preventing burn-in. The best gaming monitors keep getting faster and faster, and at Computex 2025, we've already seen loads of blazing-fast displays. For instance, our own Jason England went hands-on with the Zowie XL2586X+, which has an even faster 600Hz refresh rate. Faster isn't always better, though. You see, that Zowie monitor uses a TN panel while the MSI one I checked out uses a QD-OLED one. Though its refresh rate is 100Hz lower, you get wider viewing angles and, most importantly, vibrant, accurate colors with perfect to their fast response times and high refresh rates, TN panels have long been a mainstay in the competitive gaming scene. However, MSI is looking to change that by going all in with QD-OLED ones to give gamers the best of both worlds with colors that truly pop and high refresh rates that keep getting faster. If you have one of the best OLED TVs or an OLED gaming monitor, you know the fear of burn-in is all too real. Leaving a static image or a toolbar on your display for too long at peak brightness can have serious consequences. Fortunately, MSI's OLED Care offers several features designed to fight burn-in. With MSI OLED Care 2.0 and now 3.0, your monitor actively works in the background to prevent burn-in in two key ways. First off, you have Pixel Shift. As the name suggests, it moves a display's pixels at regular intervals, and you can adjust it between three preset intervals: slow, normal and fast. Then you have Panel Protect, which performs a Pixel Refresh automatically if the screen is active for more than four hours. One common complaint with Panel Protect, though, is that being prompted to run a Pixel Refresh can get annoying, especially if you're in the middle of playing a game. With its new MAG 272QP QD-OLED X50 gaming monitor, MSI uses hardware and AI to address this. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Underneath the company's logo in the bottom center of the monitor, there's now an AI Care Sensor module with a CMOS image sensor. This allows for presence detection, and the monitor will automatically turn off when you walk away from your computer and turn back on when you approach it. So, how does this tie in with preventing burn-in? Well, when you're away from the monitor, it can run Panel Protect in the background to protect its display so that your game or your work won't be interrupted. Screen size 26.5 inches Resolution 2560 x 1440 Refresh rate 500Hz Brightness SDR 300, HDR 500 (peak 1,000) Ports 2 x HDMI 2.1, 1 x DisplayPort 1.4a, 1 x Type-C (DP alt) with 155W power delivery, 1 x 3.5 mm audio jack Other features 100 x 100 mm mounting, adjustable/rotatable stand Thanks to the MAG 272QP QD-OLED X50's built-in NPU, its AI Care Sensor can distinguish between people, pets and objects. This way, when your cat gets in front of your monitor, its display won't turn on. It's worth noting that while the AI Care Sensor does capture images for detection, it doesn't store them. Besides turning the monitor on and off, this sensor is also used for adaptive dimming. Let's say you look away at something on the other side of the room, the sensor will adjust the screen's brightness to save power and then turn the brightness back up once you're looking at the monitor again. The sensor also allows the display to automatically adjust to match the ambient light in a room, so the monitor won't be overly bright at night or too dim during the day. Right next to the MAG 272QP QD-OLED X50 on the show floor at Computex 2025, MSI had another QD-OLED monitor set up. This display was one of MSI's first QD-OLED monitors, and to show its OLED Care tech for preventing burn-in, it's been running continuously for years. I have to admit, besides their higher price, burn-in is the main reason I've stuck with IPS and haven't upgraded to OLED or QD-OLED yet myself. However, back at home, I'm currently reviewing the MSI MPG 321URXW QD-OLED gaming monitor. At first, I was really worried about burn-in and even downloaded an animated wallpaper and hid my computer's taskbar just to be safe. I also got a few Panel Protect prompts while in the middle of a game. However, seeing how MSI is dealing with the issue of burn-in has certainly assuaged my initial fears. The new AI Care Sensor on the MAG 272QP QD-OLED X50 has the potential to be a game changer, both when it comes to preventing burn-in and with presence detection. Of course, we'll have to get this one in for review to test it in a much less crowded environment than the show floor at Computex.


Tom's Guide
19-05-2025
- Tom's Guide
I pixel-peeped the world's fastest gaming monitor — after testing 610Hz, real-life feels laggy
A few months ago, I saw Zowie's 600Hz gaming monitor — the original world's fastest esports screen. Now at Computex 2025, Asus has narrowly beaten that record, and I'm not sure I can go back to the refresh rate of real life. The Asus ROG Strix Ace XG248QSG may not be the most colorful, sharpest or brightest monitor out there, but that's because it has placed a focus specifically on going so OTT on the Hz. To put just how fast that refresh rate is, it's 100 times quicker than the average human blink. You could quickly close your eyes and miss 164 frames of gameplay! Another monitor, another ridiculous name because…reasons, I guess. Anyway, as you can see from the specs, this is everything a pro gamer needs in one package. Screen Size 24.1 inches Resolution 1920 x 1080 pixels Refresh rate Up to 610Hz DCI-P3 color gamut 90% Input lag 0.8ms Response time 0.1ms To see the refresh rate in action, we saw the classic UFO screen test — watching small spaceship icons fly from left to right to see how solid the edges look. And, well, it legitimately looked like somebody was moving a piece of paper from left to right. The 610Hz has a lot to do with it, but there's more magic Asus is applying to this. First, Extreme Low Motion Blur 2 technology is able to keep things razor sharp while also offering 65% better brightness compared to competitors. And second, 0.1ms response time and 0.8ms input latency guarantees near-immediate reactions to any movements you make. When you get into frame rates like this, you don't feel like you're using a screen anymore — you feel like you're using an extension of your own eyeballs. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Opening the slot at the back, you'll find a couple of HDMI ports and a DisplayPort for your connectivity needs. The screen itself is on a highly adjustable stand, of which the base doesn't take up much space at all. In fact, if you care more about frame rate than your own eyesight, you can lower the height and angle it upwards for the classic esports gaming perspective of getting up close and personal with the screen! Just like any monitor I test like this, it's worth noting that this is only for a particular niche group of gamers that will really reap the benefits of this. For all the DCI-P3 talk, the colors seem a little washed out, and the brightness is kind of low. But that's intentional, as Asus has specifically targeted taking that refresh rate up to ludicrous levels. If you want something that makes your games pretty, go with something OLED-loaded with a higher resolution like Alienware's AW2752Q. The one question, though, is price. And much like a lot of tech we're seeing at Computex, there's a big tariff-related shrug. We'll just have to see what the price is when it launches in July, but my bet is something in the vicinity of $1,200. That doesn't stop it from being one of the coolest monitors I've ever seen, which has now left me viewing the real world in 30 FPS.