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ASUS ROG Swift PG32UQX

ASUS

ROG Swift PG32UQX

8.6/10
Based on 4 reviews

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8.5

Clara’s Verdict

Excellent

Absolutely stunning visuals and gaming performance, but the $1,500+ price tag is a lot to justify unless you're a serious gamer or content creator.

Best for: PC gamers who want the absolute best visuals, Content creators needing accurate colors, People with deep pockets who want no compromises

Skip if: Console gamers (no HDMI 2.1), Budget-conscious buyers, Anyone who values portability

8.0

Ethan’s Verdict

Excellent

Best-in-class HDR performance undermined by aggressive pricing and missing HDMI 2.1 in a monitor that costs more than three flagship laptops.

Best for: PC gamers with deep pockets, content creators needing HDR reference, spec obsessives

Skip if: console gamers, budget-conscious buyers, anyone needing future-proofing

Clara’s Pros & Cons

  • +Picture quality is genuinely stunning and industry-leading.
  • +HDR performance is absolutely incredible with 1,400 nits peak brightness.
  • +144Hz gaming feels buttery smooth with G-Sync Ultimate.
  • +Excellent color accuracy for creative work and gaming.
  • Price is eye-watering even at current sale price.
  • No HDMI 2.1 support limits console gaming options.
  • Massive footprint takes up serious desk space.
  • Audible cooling fan can be distracting in quiet rooms.

Ethan’s Pros & Cons

  • +Best contrast ratio ever recorded for LCD panel technology
  • +1400 nits peak brightness with 1152 dimming zones delivers real HDR
  • +Factory-calibrated color accuracy suitable for professional work
  • +G-Sync Ultimate with native hardware module and low input lag
  • HDMI 2.1 missing on a $3000 monitor launched in 2021
  • Visible halo effects in high-contrast HDR scenes
  • Audible cooling fan distracts in quiet environments
  • ULMB and VRR cannot run simultaneously, limiting feature utility

Score Breakdown

Picture Quality
9.520% wt
HDR & Color Accuracy
9.520% wt
Motion & Gaming
9.015% wt
Design & Build
8.020% wt
Smart Features
8.510% wt
Connectivity
7.010% wt
Value
4.55% wt

Score Breakdown

Picture Quality
9.025% wt
HDR & Color Accuracy
8.515% wt
Motion & Gaming
8.515% wt
Design & Build
7.510% wt
Smart Features
8.010% wt
Connectivity
6.515% wt
Value
5.010% wt

Clara’s Full Review

A Monitor That Makes You Stop and Stare

Okay, let me be real with you. The ASUS ROG Swift PG32UQX is basically the monitor equivalent of a luxury sports car. It's incredible, it performs beautifully, and most people probably don't need it.

But if you're a serious PC gamer or content creator, reviewers say this thing is genuinely magical. The picture quality is described as the best anyone's ever seen on a computer monitor. We're talking stunning contrast, incredible brightness, and colors that just pop. When you're playing an HDR game, it's apparently a total spectacle.

The 32-inch 4K screen gives you tons of real estate for work and gaming. The Mini LED backlighting with 1,152 dimming zones creates that incredible contrast and detail. The 144Hz refresh rate keeps gaming smooth and responsive, especially with G-Sync Ultimate handling the variable refresh rates. For PC gaming, this monitor is basically as good as it gets.

Now, the elephant in the room is price. At $1,497.50, this is a serious investment. That's more than most people spend on their entire monitor setup. You're paying for absolute top-tier performance and features that honestly, most gamers won't fully utilize.

There are some practical compromises too. No HDMI 2.1 means if you're gaming on PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X, you can't run 4K at 144Hz. There's also an audible cooling fan that reviewers mention can be distracting in quiet rooms. And this thing is massive and heavy, so make sure your desk can handle it.

The design is aggressive and very "gaming monitor," which some people love and others find over the top. There's an OLED panel on the chin that displays system info, which is a nice touch. Build quality is solid throughout.

For content creators needing accurate color work, the factory-calibrated colors and wide color gamut make this genuinely useful. For streamers, there's even a built-in thread for camera mounting.

Honestly, this is a monitor for people who either have the budget and want zero compromises, or who use their monitor for professional color-critical work. For most gamers, a really good $500-800 monitor will make you just as happy. But if you can afford it and want the absolute best? Reviewers say you won't regret it.

Clara Mercer, Home & Lifestyle Editor

Ethan’s Full Review

The Best Monitor Money Can Buy, If You Have That Much Money

The ASUS ROG Swift PG32UQX is a technical achievement. Let's be clear about that. The Mini LED backlight with 1152 dimming zones is engineering that costs real money to implement, and the results justify it. Reviewers consistently describe the contrast ratio as the best ever measured for an LCD panel. Peak brightness of 1400 nits for HDR content is legitimately exceptional. The 98% DCI-P3 color gamut with factory calibration under dE 2 puts this in professional territory.

But here's the problem: you're paying $3000 for a gaming monitor.

At MSRP, this thing costs more than three flagship gaming laptops. Even at the current street price of $1497, you're looking at a $1000 premium over comparable 4K 144Hz displays. The question isn't whether the PG32UQX is good. It's whether it's good enough to justify that gap.

The answer is complicated. If you're a PC gamer with money to spare and you want the absolute best HDR performance available on a monitor, this is it. The local dimming precision and brightness are real advantages over OLED for gaming, despite the halo effects that reviewers noted. G-Sync Ultimate certification with native hardware delivers the low input lag and variable overdrive you'd expect at this tier.

But ASUS made some questionable decisions. The lack of HDMI 2.1 in 2021 is indefensible for a $3000 display. Console gamers and anyone planning to use modern HDMI sources are simply locked out. That's not a limitation of the technology; it's a choice to save money on the connector hardware. The audible cooling fan is another compromise that shouldn't exist at this price. You're hearing the thermals of a display that costs as much as a used car.

The feature set is impressive on paper: ULMB for motion blur reduction, an OLED info panel on the chin, Aura Sync RGB, customizable OSD. But ULMB can't run with VRR, which defeats the purpose for modern gaming. The omission of Dolby Vision and built-in speakers feels cheap given the price tag.

The design is aggressive and bulky. 24 pounds and a massive footprint mean this monitor dominates your desk. That's not inherently bad, but it limits placement flexibility and screams "gaming" louder than many professionals want.

Here's the honest take: this is a luxury product for people who care more about having the best than having the best value. The HDR performance is genuinely world-class. If you're editing HDR content or you've got a high-end gaming rig and unlimited budget, the PG32UQX delivers. But for most people, the premium you're paying doesn't scale with the performance gain. You're buying the top 5% of monitor performance at the top 1% of monitor prices.

Ethan Mercer, Editor-in-Chief

Specifications

HDRHDR1400
panel typeIPS
resolution3840 x 2160
screen size32 inches
refresh rate144Hz

Overall Rating

8.6
out of 10
Clara
8.5
Ethan
8.0
Critics (2)
9.0

Related Reviews

Head-to-Head Comparisons

Alternatives Worth Considering

ASUS ProArt PA32UCX
Better for: Content creators who prioritize color accuracy over gaming featuresTradeoff: Lower refresh rate and no G-Sync, but still excellent for professional work

Review History

Initial review from real source data

Initial review from real source data

Editorial Independence

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