- IT Support
The Difference Between IT Support and IT Consultancy
11 Jan, 2026







£386.52 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £321 ex‑VAT, the ASUS TUF VG34VQL1B is a pretty strong “serious productivity + good gaming on the side” pick. A 34" ultrawide at this price is exactly the kind of monitor that makes everyday work feel faster—side‑by‑side documents, spreadsheets, and dashboards are noticeably easier to live with than a 27" 16:9 panel. For teams working in finance, ops, or engineering who live in multiple windows, it’s one of those purchases that people quietly stop complaining about after the first week.
That said, I wouldn’t buy it if you’re very sensitive to colour consistency or if you rely on tight design/print work—TUF models are better tuned for value than for colour-critical accuracy. Also, ultrawide is a workflow choice: if your staff use lots of legacy apps that don’t play nicely with 21:9 layouts, you might end up with wasted space or awkward resizing. Buy it if you want an affordable upgrade that boosts day-to-day screen real estate and delivers smooth gaming for the occasional “after work” session; avoid it if your use is predominantly colour-accurate creative work or standard office setups that can’t be optimised for ultrawide.

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkVision P25i-30 - LED monitor - 25" (24.5" viewable) - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 100 Hz - IPS - 250 cd/m� - 1300:1 - 4 ms - HDMI, VGA, DisplayPort - raven black

LG Electronics
LG UltraFine 27US550-W - LED monitor - 27" - 3840 x 2160 4K UHD (2160p) @ 60 Hz - IPS - 300 cd/m� - 1000:1 - HDR10 - 5 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - white

LG Electronics
LG 22U401A-B - LED monitor - 22" (21.5" viewable) - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 100 Hz - VA - 250 cd/m� - 3000:1 - HDR10 - 5 ms - HDMI, VGA

Lenovo
Lenovo ThinkVision T34WD-40 - LED monitor - curved - 34" - 3440 x 1440 UWQHD @ 120 Hz - VA - 300 cd/m� - 3000:1 - HDR10 - 4 ms - HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C - eclipse black