Brilliant monitor so long as you're aware of the quirks of OLED
by PaulBuild quality and design: looks and feels like a premium product. Super stable stand with adjustable tilt, main cable connections including power at side rather than the bottom so very easy access to connect up. It has a remote, yeah I know a minor point but such a massive quality-of-life improvement over fiddling with buttons on the monitor to access the OSD. Picture quality: Overall brilliant. This replaced a (very capable) Acer Predator CG437K and is a noticeable all round (*) improvement: the pure blacks and whites make everything pop so much more - those dark caves and mountainous reaches in skyrim never looked so good, in Fortnite snow really looks like snow all of a sudden and gave me a pang of nostalgia for old skiing holidays. The accuracy and richness of the colour rendering makes 3D games appear "even more 3D" somehow. Although I was never really bothered by the slight motion smearing of the acers VA panel when panning around, I REALLY notice the absence of it and I think this contributes to the even-more-3D effect I mentioned earlier, it also helps situational awareness in fast games like Fortnite. (*) Although I said all round, we must talk about the limitations of OLED brightness, with auto dimming off I have it set to 90% and thats adequate for me but possibly not for some people. The Acer for example was capable of burning your silhouette into the wall behind you so this is a material step down in theoretical capability BUT not one that I personally care about as I don't need high brightness or care about HDR etc. Value for money: Look if you spending over a grand on a monitor its a money-no-object purchase right so who cares :-) Summary: A solid 5 stars and, IF you can live with the brightness limitations of an OLED ... a noticeable step up from even premium monitors using other panel types.