

VG248QE acts far more gracefully with lower custom resolutions you can create in Custom resolution utility (that you may want to use in directX 9 games) than the Benq does.the Benq is more hit and miss, while the Asus eats everything you can throw at it. The 27" XL2720Z keeps the exact same gamma point regardless of refresh rate (a big plus). Benq XL2411Z/XL2420Z/XL2430T, all with blur reduction, have their own gamma settings, so you can avoid dealing with ICC profiles. The VG and Benq 24" panels (This AU Optronics panel is also used in XL2411T and XL2420T, XL2411Z, XL2420Z) all seem to have an issue with gamma point becoming too low (washed out) at high refresh rates compared to the spot on 60 hz, which means you need an ICC profile for 120 and 144 hz if you want decent gamma. Very nice and vibrant (if somewhat oversaturated and some shades overempathized) in Theater mode., and ability to use lightboost through the Strobelight program on AMD And Nvidia gpu's. VG248QE (as long as you get one without the high refresh rate scanlines/lightboost scanlines problem) is a good monitor to start on. Eh? Capacitor problem was from awhile ago, and that was NOT limited to Benq.
