TUF Goes FreeSync Premium: ASUS TUF Gaming VG27VH1B 27-Inch 165Hz DCI-P3 Monitor
by Anton Shilov on March 30, 2020 9:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Monitors
- Displays
- AMD
- Asus
- FreeSync
- Adaptive-Sync
- TUF Gaming
ASUS brought its TUF Gaming sub-brand to the market a couple of years ago to address needs of mainstream gamers. But as requirements evolve, the company has added premium features to TUF Gaming-branded products every now and then. This time around ASUS has introduced a new TUF-branded 27-inch curved monitor that boasts with AMD’s FreeSync Premium certification, a wider-than-sRGB color gamut, and a 165 Hz refresh rate.
The ASUS TUF Gaming VG27VH1B monitor is based on a 27-inch curved VA panel featuring a 1920×1080 resolution, 250 nits luminance, a 3000:1 contrast ratio, 178°/178° viewing angles, a 1 ms MPRT response time, and a 165 Hz maximum refresh rate. The LCD can reproduce 120% of the sRGB as well as 90% of the DCI-P3 color gamuts, which is rather good for a monitor that is supposed to be (at least relatively) inexpensive.
One of the key selling points of the TUF Gaming VG27VH1B is that the monitor features a scaler that supports VESA’s Adaptive-Sync variable refresh rate technology. The display is also certified to meet AMD’s FreeSync Premium requirements, which, as you'd expect for a high refresh rate display, means it officially supports low framerate compensation (LFC) mode. All told, the monitor supports refresh rates from 50 Hz up to 165 Hz.
As for other technologies, the TUF Gaming VG27VH1B also fully supports ASUS’s ELMB (extreme low motion blur) technology, which is designed to make fast-action scenes look sharper. What is particularly important about this ELMB implementation is that it can work together with Adaptive-Sync/FreeSync, so that it isn't an either/or situation. Other notable capabilities of the new TUF monitor include in-game enhancements techniques like Shadow Boost, GamePlus modes (Crosshair, Timer, FPS Counter, Display Alignment), and GameVisual genre-tailored modes.
One interesting thing to note about the TUF Gaming VG27VH1B is its set of inputs that includes one D-Sub connector for legacy PCs as well as two HDMI 2.0 ports to connect modern PCs, but there aren't any DisplayPort inputs. On the audio side of things, the monitor has 2W stereo speakers along with a line-in and a headphone out connector.
As for ergonomics, the ASUS VG27VH1B comes with a stand that can adjust tilt and swivel, but not height. Also, the display has VESA 100×100 mounting holes.
The ASUS TUF VG27VH1B Monitor | ||
TUF Gaming VG27VH1B | ||
Panel | 27" VA | |
Native Resolution | 1920 × 1080 (16:9) |
|
Refresh Rate | 165 Hz | |
Dynamic Refresh Rate | Technology | AMD FreeSync Premium VESA Adaptive-Sync |
Range | HDMI 50 Hz - 165 Hz | |
Response Time | 1 ms MPRT | |
Brightness | 250 cd/m² | |
Contrast | 3000:1 | |
Color Gamut | 125% sRGB 90% DCI-P3 |
|
Viewing Angles | 178°/178° horizontal/vertical | |
Curvature | 1500R | |
Inputs | 1 × D-Sub 2 × HDMI 2.0 |
|
USB Hub | - | |
Audio | 2 W stereo speakers | |
Proprietary Enhancements | GamePlus: Crosshair/Timer/FPS Counter/Display Alignment GameVisual: Scenery/Racing/Cinema/RTS/RPG/FPS/sRGB Modes/MOBA Mode GameFast Input |
|
Stand | Height | - |
Tilt | +23° ~ -5° | |
Swivel | +15° ~ -15° | |
Power Consumption | Idle | 0.5 W |
Typical | ? | |
Maximum | 28 W | |
MSRP | ? |
ASUS already lists its TUF Gaming VG27VH1B monitor on its website, so expect it to hit the market in the foreseeable future (COVID-19 willing).
Related Reading:
- Big, Fast, & Curved: The ASUS TUF VG328H1B, A 31.5-Inch Gaming Display
- More Hz for Less: GIGABYTE Unveils Aorus FI27Q 27-Inch 165 Hz Monitor
- Nixeus Announces NX-EDG274K: A 27" 144Hz FreeSync-Certified 4K Gaming Monitor
- Faster & TUFer Gaming: The ASUS VG27WQ 27-Inch 165Hz Curved Monitor w/ FreeSync
Source: ASUS (via Hermitage Akihabara)
28 Comments
View All Comments
jeremyshaw - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
Completely missing, even the shot of the rear "silkscreen" shows markings for only one port (unless if that single marking denotes 2 HDMI ports, somehow).mode_13h - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
Premium and 1080p don't really go together.milkywayer - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
Yup. These guys should be forced to put a big "poor ugly" sticker on any monitor / laptop that is 1440p/1080p in 2020 ffs. This is just lameSttm - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
250 cd/m²That is just insane to me. Why are they still making such dim monitors? 300 should be the very minimum and what you get on the super cheap stuff.
A5 - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
If it wasn't curved, I'd say this is just 1/4th of a 55" 4K TV panel that they need to get rid of some overstock on.With the curve, I'm just totally lost on what niche they're going for here.
Kamen Rider Blade - Monday, March 30, 2020 - link
UGH! More Curved Monitors.STOP putting Curves in Monitors!!!
inperfectdarkness - Monday, April 6, 2020 - link
You shut your cakehole. There's a litany of 100% flat monitors out there...and a crapload of those that have these stupidly high refresh rates.Even people that use 2 or more monitors--don't set them up completely parallel. They're always slightly angled towards each other; because it's more comfortable for the user. We need MORE curved, not less...but we also need FULL 4K, not the ultra-wide-yet-still-1080-vertical crap.
ballsystemlord - Tuesday, March 31, 2020 - link
That's an amazing monitor!