Alienware expands monitor range

Not every young man would be so comfortable parting with a greatly high sum of dollars into a gaming monitor simply because of how great its graphical display is or how fast its refresh rate may go. To encourage gamers who adore OLED technology but shun the high premium prices that come with most of Alienware’s stuff, the price has been cut. 

The first step is indicated by the 27-inch AW2725D, a 2,560 x 1,440-pixel display with a refresh rate of 280Hz, which shall be expected to cost around $ 550- very much decent for the product category, come summer.

Alienware has thus introduced the AW2725Q, which it first rolled out at CES as one of the world’s first new 27-inch 240Hz 4K monitors (with the previous 4K QD-OLEDs being 32 inches). 

This is now selling for $900, but the bad side here is it has no DisplayPort 2.1 support, with HDR relying on Display Stream Compression big letdown. It is coupled with the DisplayHDR True Black 400 certification which makes it likely not very bright. 

However, the HDMI 2.1 connection in this display means that their system can now transmit signals in 4K (full bandwidth) with variable refresh rates and make it compatible with both consoles and PC setups.

A new AW30 in indigo is revisiting this original 34-inch, with QD-OLEDs running a resolution of 3,440×1,440 pixels and being among the very first commercialized products. The fall installation will also boost the design to 240Hz and add a port upgrade to HDMI 2.1 with FRL. 

This support now entirely transfers to the Alienware brand. Alienware Care, a paid service tier which was previously managed by Dell’s support team, is also offered here. 

Basic services are free and offer 24-hour tech support, basic hardware troubleshooting, one- to two-business-day turnaround, and quick exchange for defective displays.

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