- Network Admin
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£1698.12 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
The ASUS ProArt OLED PA32UCDM is one of those monitors that’s genuinely “special,” but it’s also priced like a premium finishing tool, not a general-purpose display. If your day-to-day is colour-critical work—photo/video grading, design with tight proofs, or anyone who lives in calibrated workflows—QD‑OLED makes a strong case: the contrast and punch are fantastic, and ProArt-style support is built for people who actually care about accuracy rather than just brightness. Also, it’s the kind of screen you keep raving about once you’ve used it for a few days, because it makes SDR and HDR content look meaningfully better than typical IPS panels.
That said, at £1415.10 ex‑VAT, it’s hard to justify unless the ROI is clear. OLED can be a concern in long sessions with static UI elements (spreadsheets, dashboards, fixed toolbars) and for workplaces that can’t guarantee sensible usage patterns. If your team uses the monitor as a general CAD/office workhorse with static content all day, an IPS alternative is usually the safer, better value bet. Buy this if you’re a studio or creative department where calibration, consistent visuals, and viewing quality matter daily; don’t bother if it’s mainly for office productivity, mixed content, and “whatever looks good from any angle.”

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkVision T24d-30 - LED monitor - 24" - 1920 x 1200 WUXGA - IPS - 300 cd/m� - 1500:1 - 4 ms - HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort - speakers - raven black

LG Electronics
LG UltraGear 27GS85Q-B - LED monitor - gaming - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 180 Hz - Nano IPS - 400 cd/m� - DisplayHDR 400 - 1 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort

HP
HP E27 G5 - E-Series - LED monitor - 27" - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 75 Hz - IPS - 300 cd/m� - 1000:1 - 5 ms - HDMI, DisplayPort, USB - black, black and silver (stand)

Dell
Dell Pro P 27 USB-C Hub Conferencing Monitor - P2726DEB