SNate wrote:
Appreciate the tip about the website. It was grossly more information than I ever could have wanted. It mad me realize I was a 3rd grader trying to take a Masters course.
It also helped me look seriously at at a few screens though.
$600 SAMSUNG SD850 S27D850T
$600 BenQ XL2730Z
$550 Dell UltraSharp U2715H
$450 Asus PB278Q
$400 Dell UltraSharp U2515H
I am leaning more towards the BenQ. The reviews are mixed though, as it is the first Freesync screen available, and the drivers for Freesync apparently aren't all there just yet. It does however have a lot of gaming-centric features that sounds great on paper though. Price is higher than I'd like, but I do intend on keeping the screens for a decade.
I've decided $600 is the absolute maximum I'll spend on a screen, but I'd love to hear good reasons to use one of the lower priced screens, or another screen I didn't look at.
A lot of it will also be personal choice. To me the best two on the list you are are the Samsung and the Asus. The BenQ is actually great but it has a large bezel and a TN panel which is too big of a flaw for me personally. The Samsung and the Asus both have very nice PLS panels. The Asus has huge bezels though. So I would go with the Samsung myself. To be honest The Dell U2715H is a great monitor, perhaps the best on your list. I was hesitant to say so because I don't approve of Dell or their Business practices. I actually got 12 of those for my lab and they are great and everyone loves them. All of the Monitors on you list have great stands so that is good, and all of the I/O is relatively the same. So after that random train of thought I'll say you can't really go wrong with any of those. I personally tend to gravitate towards the Samsung option it has a PLS panel, a Matte finish, Every I/O option capable of pushing 2K, and they went ahead and just cut the garbage 1W speakers out instead of adding them for old time sake. Good Luck