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The ASUS ROG Swift PG32UCDM is a 32-inch 4K QD-OLED gaming monitor delivering ultra-vivid colors, true blacks, and a blistering 240Hz refresh rate with 0.03ms response time. Designed for pro gamers and power users, it features advanced cooling with graphene film to prevent burn-in, a Neo Proximity Sensor for smart OLED care, and a built-in KVM switch for multi-device control. This premium display combines stunning visuals with cutting-edge speed and durability, making it a must-have for those who demand the absolute best in immersive gaming and productivity.















| ASIN | B0CV26XVMD |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Brand | ASUS |
| Colour | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (393) |
| Date First Available | 22 May 2025 |
| Graphics Card Description | Integrated |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express |
| Graphics RAM Type | DIMM |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item Weight | 8.8 kg |
| Item model number | PG32UCDM |
| Manufacturer | ASUS |
| Number of HDMI Ports | 2 |
| Operating System | Window |
| Processor Count | 1 |
| Processor Type | None |
| Product Dimensions | 53.34 x 96.52 x 124.46 cm; 8.8 kg |
| Resolution | 3840 x 2160 Pixels |
| Screen Resolution | 3840x2160 |
| Series | PG32UCDM |
| Standing screen display size | 32 Inches |
| Voltage | 20 Volts (DC) |
V**S
Edito: con el nuevo Dlss 4.5 todos mis juegos ahora llegan sin problemas a 240fps en 4k es el momento perfecto para comprar este monitor. Es hermoso, la mayoría de juegos los puedo jugar en 120FPS en 4k, juegos competitivos los juego en 4k a 240hz y la calidad de la imagen es simplemente maravillosa. tengo una RTX 5080 astral
C**N
The monitor, like all the QD-OLED monitors, has a truly awe-inspiring picture, from inky blacks to extremely bright whites, and truly rich colors - so rich I had to turn the saturation down. Unlike its main competitor, Alienware (Dell), it has a built-in KVM switch and the usual passel of gamer-centric features. (Though most of those are only really useful for first person shooter and Battle Royale games). It provides a full set of cables in their own pouch: A Displayport cable, an HDMI cable, and two USB cables. It has built in safety measures to prevent the evergreen OLED problem, burn-in. It also comes with software that can replicate most of its hardware menu items, but easier and quicker. It even has Picture-in-Picture, so those using this behemoth for work can monitor work and home computers simultaneously. It's a gorgeous piece of hardware and unlike some previous reviewers mine came and worked perfectly, so maybe ASUS got their stuff together. But there are downsides. Some are big ones: -- The KVM switch is awkward to use to say the least. You have to press a button, select using the tiny monitor joystick, and then it switches. And it used to be worse - you had to switch keyboard, mouse, and video source *separately.* That's been fixed with firmware, thank goodness. -- HDR (High Dynamic Range) can be very problematic with the monitor, as using it as an HDR monitor removes almost all ability to control the picture. There are far better HDR monitors out there. -- Some overly adolescent features (such as a bottom-facing projector; they even provide a set of lenses for it, including blanks and of course the ROG logo). -- Only one Displayport input. The others are two HDMI ports, a USB-B port, three USB-A ports and a Thunderbolt/USB-C port, either for using the monitor as a hub or for KVM. -- Documentation, including the official manual, is *abysmal.* That's not just an ASUS problem, that's an industry problem. But expect zero help in, for example, setting up the downward projector - it isn't mentioned in the manual at all. Nor are explanations for a lot of the built in menu options. I had to use Reddit to get most of my info. -- Giant power brick. It's 600W and almost as big as my computer's power supply! -- Availability is also abysmal. This is an *extremely* popular monitor and expect the price to keep going up (July 2024), because it is in such hot demand. Shades of the Great Graphics Card Shortage of 2020-2023. In summary: A great monitor that falls short of being the ultimate.
S**S
Great monitor colours beautiful Would definitely recommend it
R**O
El mejor monitor llegó perfecto
C**I
This review is for the ASUS PG32UCDM, which is a QD-OLED monitor sporting a 240hz refresh rate and 4K resolution to clarify when Amazon lists all the reviews together in the way they do. Gaming performance: At 240hz, provided your graphics card can push pixels that quickly, this monitor is at the top of the game when considering the speed of competitive 4K monitors. There does not currently (2/24/25) exist a 4K panel that can do more than 4K 240hz, if you require more for competitive gaming then you should look elsewhere to a 1440p monitor or the like. I played Halo Infinite at 240hz and the experience was divine. Coming from a 144hz 4K 27" IPS panel, there is no comparison: the picture was unimaginably clear, vivid, crisp, and with dark blacks. Age of Empires IV with HDR mode enabled looks like a different game entirely. I will have to replay every older game I own with this monitor. The colors quite literally give life to old games and show you things in titles you've already played that you may have missed on your older monitor. Other media consumption: I do not own a TV, thus I consume all of my media through my computer and a monitor that could natively display all current types of media formats (HDR, Dolby Vision, etc) was important to me and this monitor excels in media consumption much like an OLED TV does. This monitor supports Dolby Vision which is quite uncommon among computer monitors, competitor's products that I've checked during my research prior to buying (Gigabyte F032U2P as well as the MSI equivalent) fall short in this area, not supporting DV. Switching HDR modes is easily accessible in the monitor settings. HDR support is excellent just the same as DV and is the default mode. Just like with games, true blacks show with OLED panels such as this one because the pixel completely turns off, unlike other panels where local dimming and other technologies try to reproduce black shades but they often come out gray as some light from the backlight shines through. Not the case with this monitor. The dark, eerie, emptiness of space in 1979's Alien really comes through and the vivid colors of Avatar shine bright as if you were really on Pandora. I cannot express enough how important a good monitor is when putting together a gaming or media setup. It is the primary way you interact with your computer. Things to know: OLED is susceptible to burn in, and as in the old days with CRTs (which were also prone to burn in), care must be taken to mitigate the effects. It's the return of the screen saver. The monitor comes with a standard 8 hour pixel refresh cycle which prompts you with the on screen display to run a pixel refresh. It takes about 5 minutes to complete, and you can postpone it if you so wish. It is also recommended to use a dark windows theme, no background, auto-hide taskbar, among other mitigation measures. Text fringing: I thought this would be a problem for me, since I am both easily nauseated by blurry text and use my computer for a lot of text-based work as well (coding and writing these reviews...). Truthfully it is only noticeable if you get very, very close to the screen, much closer than is usable. There are also mitigation measures you can take for this such as using different fontpacks and so on. Overall, this monitor is excellent and I forsee using it for 5+ years. I will edit this review if burn in appears in any significant or severe way or earlier than expected.
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