![]() ![]() You will rarely see a 4K monitor in this price range with such excellent specs, but Dell surprised us with the 27-inch 4K S2721Q monitor. It's also VESA-compatible in case you want to add a monitor arm for a better viewing angle. The ViewSonic's stand can adjust five inches in height, plus swivel 120 degrees or pivot left or right 90 degrees. It has five USB ports, two HDMI 2.0s, and one regular and Mini DisplayPort each, which is useful for a wide range of connectivity even if we wish there could be one USB-C. This monitor also isn't necessarily built for gaming but will be perfectly serviceable for non-competitive games, with 14ms GTG of input lag (or 7ms overclocked) and a 60Hz refresh rate. Creatives will appreciate the pro-level customization at a casual price, though anyone who needs high DCI-P3 or AdobeRGB coverage may need to look elsewhere. ![]() You can reportedly use 14-bit Look-Up Tables (LUT) to generate literal trillions of colors, and you can also adjust the brightness, contrast, color format, and other color settings in the Color Adjust menu. ![]() 709, or 100% SMPTE-C color spaces, meaning they'll display in true color across the entire monitor. Specifically, ViewSonic promises integrated color uniformity for 99% sRGB, 99% EBU, 99% Rec. While far from the best in terms of raw specs, we chose the ViewSonic VP2768-4K for our top slot because it doesn't stray too far from what you'd pay for an excellent non-4K monitor and because it hits a wide gamut of colors for anyone who regularly uses photo or video editing software. ![]()
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