Acer and ASUS G-Sync HDR Displays Listed & Priced In Europe
by Anton Shilov on April 10, 2018 3:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Monitors
- Acer
- Asus
- DCI-P3
- Predator X27
- ROG Swift PG27UQ
- G-Sync HDR

Select European retailers have begun to take pre-orders on G-Sync HDR-supporting monitors from Acer and ASUS that are expected to hit the market as early as late this month. Pricing of the Acer Predator X27 and the ASUS ROG Swift PG27UQ displays appears to be between €2500 and €3000 with VAT, which looks expensive even when European prices and VAT are taken into account.
Acer and ASUS first showcased their 27-inch 4K 144 Hz displays supporting NVIDIA’s G-Sync HDR technology at last year’s CES, but could not bring them to market in 2017. Last month NVIDIA — which developed and assembled the prototypes for these monitors — said that both highly-anticipated LCDs would ship in April to rejoice of gamers. However pricing for these monitors has never officially been unveiled, as Acer and ASUS were waiting until closer to the displays' launch to release that information.
According to Geizhals.eu, a price-search service, there are a number of retailers in Austria, Denmark and Germany, who are accepting pre-orders on the the Acer Predator X27 and the ASUS ROG Swift PG27UQ. The displays are expected to ship in late April, or in May, but their prices look rather extreme.
G-Sync HDR Monitor Pre-Order Prices | ||||||
Retailer | Local Price with VAT | Price in USD with VAT | Price in USD without VAT | |||
Acer Predator X27 | Komplett.dk | 18,495 DKK | $3,068 | $2455 | ||
ASUS ROG Swift PG27UQ | XITRA.de | €2,442 | $3,017 | $2535 | ||
I-CS.at | €2,604 | $3,218 | $2682 | |||
Built-Direkt.de | €2,646 | $3,270 | $2748 | |||
K&M | €2,919 | $3,607 | $3031 | |||
Bora Computers | €2,919 | $3,607 | $3031 |
The Acer Predator X27 and the ASUS ROG Swift PG27UQ monitors will be the first monitors to support NVIDIA’s G-Sync HDR technology, with their high-end technology setting them up to fetch a high-end price. From a hardware perspective, they are based on AU Optronics’ M270QAN02.2 AHVA panel featuring a 3840×2160 resolution and a 144 Hz refresh rate, this is a rare combination of features these days. Secondly, the monitors must support the DCI-P3 color gamut and a 1000 nits brightness, another challenging combination to be supported by the backlighting. Thirdly, these monitors feature a direct LED backlighting system with 384 zones, which is currently used on one professional monitor. Last but not least, the monitors need a new scaler that supports NVIDIA’s G-Sync HDR, which was developed by NVIDIA, which fetches a further premium.
Overall, initial pricing projections for the monitors had them at around $2000. These pre-order prices in Europe are higher still, but at the same time European hardware prices tend to run high even without the impact of VAT. So it remains to be seen where US pricing will end up. But regardless of the speciifc price tag, it looks like G-Sync HDR will remain a prerogative of ultra-premium LCDs and PCs for the time being.
Related Reading:
- NVIDIA Expects 4K 144 Hz G-Sync HDR Displays to Launch in April
- Acer and ASUS Delay Their 4K 144 Hz G-Sync HDR Displays to 2018
- ASUS Demonstrates ROG Swift PG27UQ: 4K, 144 Hz, HDR, DCI-P3 and G-Sync
- Acer Announces Predator X27 Monitor: 4K@144 Hz with DCI-P3, HDR10, & G-Sync
- Samsung Announces First Freesync 2 Monitors: CHG70 & CHG90 - Quantum Dots, Up to 49”, 144 Hz, DCI-P3
Sources: Geizhals.EU, TechPowerUp, TechReport
61 Comments
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imaheadcase - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
Actually you won't. Because history of monitors shows in just a few months after these come out, "generic" brands will come out $500 cheaper. But what you should wait for before you jump on this is they are going to have a 34 inch(i hear 35 or 34 inch not sure) version. Trust me, a 34+ inch monitor is the better choice for 4k content. ReplyDanNeely - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
AUO's the only panel maker to've announced many zone backlights for HDR. Their schedule has a 35" VA 3440x1440 widescreen at 200hz and 512 dimming zones scheduled for last Q2 of this year. A 32" version of this panel is scheduled for Q3. In both cases it'll probably be a few more months from the start of volume production of panels to retail availability. ReplyBeaver M. - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
Where did you get that information?Are there new 1440p ones listed too? Reply
DanNeely - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
TFT Central's news page. What I listed was it for FALD HDR panels from AUO. None of the other panel makers have announced/leaked similar panels.http://www.tftcentral.co.uk/news_archive/38.htm#au... Reply
Caleer - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
Eh, no thanks on 34in, I ready have a PG27AQ and want to add PG27UQ as my main. But they promised those 34 screens later on this year if you want one. Replyhaukionkannel - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
When Are 32”-36” monitors with same speck as these coming out. 4K would be better with a Little bit bigger screens... Replyzodiacfml - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
I guess, this is still a good move. LCDs has muted image quality once you get used to bright OLED in the dark. I was for a surprise when I watched a 4K on my S8+. Now, I prefer it for movies over my 4K LCD TV. ReplyBeaver M. - Wednesday, April 11, 2018 - link
Until you have burn in effects. ReplySimon_Says - Thursday, April 12, 2018 - link
So it's something like a year late, it's twice the cost that's appropriate for a premium monitor, isn't even a proper 10bpc implementation, will likely still exhibit bugs in Windows 10, will no doubt have quality control problems, and the devices themselves look cringe.⛳👏 Reply
Hixbot - Tuesday, April 17, 2018 - link
wow, looks like I'm keeping my CRT for another decade. Reply