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Pixio PX279 Prime 27 inch Fast IPS 240Hz Refresh Rate 1ms GTG Response Time FHD 1920 x 1080 Resolution HDR AMD Radeon Freesync Esports LED Gaming Monitor

  • Based on 3,384 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Pixio

Arrives Saturday, May 25
Order within 5 hours and 51 minutes
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Style: 27" 1080p 240Hz Fast IPS 1ms (GTG)


Features

  • 240HZ REFRESH RATE - Maximize your performance with extreme refresh rates. Let nothing hold you back.
  • 1MS GTG RESPONSE TIME - Don't let your display be what slows you down; 1ms GTG is as fast as it gets.
  • AMD FREESYNC PREMIUM - Eliminate screen tearing with AMD's Freesync Premium.
  • FAST-IPS PANEL - Experience the best of both worlds with bright, vivid and colorful quality as IPS panels and the response time of TN panels
  • Want to game up to 240Hz refresh rate and on a bigger panel? The PX279 Prime has got you covered! This monitor is for gamers who want extreme refresh rates at a larger size at 27 inches. The 1080p resolution makes sure that your machine will be capable of outputting at this refresh rate while providing a wider perspective. It also comes equipped with a fast-IPS panel, so there is little to no ghosting.

Screen Size: 27 Inches


Display Resolution Maximum: 1920 x 1080 Pixels


Brand: Pixio


Special Feature: Adaptive Sync, Blue Light Filter, Anti-Glare Coating, Wall Mountable, Tilt Adjustment, Flicker-Free


Refresh Rate: 240 Hz


Product Dimensions: 24.2 x 9.91 x 18.3 inches


Item Weight: 10.36 pounds


Manufacturer: Pixio


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: PX279P


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: July 23, 2020


Standing screen display size: 27 Inches


Aspect Ratio: 169


Voltage: 12 Volts


Resolution: 1920 x 1080 Pixels


Image brightness: 400 lm


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, May 25

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • This is a fantastic monitor, highly recommend especially for steam deck
Style: 27" 1440p 165Hz Fast IPS 1ms (GTG) KVM Hub
I have been frustrated trying to find a good monitor for a while, but I was really happy when I got this. The colors are vibrant, resolution is great, the height, tilt, swivel are helpful. It's really nice to have basically a usb dock built into the back with Ethernet etc. You can tell that high quality materials are used, even the external power block has quality design and material. Very sturdy build overall, easy to set up. I am very happy with this purchase, I believe its worth the price. I got this specifically to use with the steam deck and it is great. There have been no issues so far really. The text clarity is great in desktop mode, definitely suitable for productivity needs. Games look really good and everything runs well except if you are playing demanding games you will have to turn down the game's resolution to get better performance but it still looks okay. All you have to do is plug in the usb c from the steamdeck to the monitor and that's it. Great for cable management and it even charges the steamdeck at the same time. The only thing that disappointed me was that I would have liked this monitor to include the usb c cable. It comes with a display port cord though. I would still give this 5 stars, you can't go wrong with this. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2023 by Josh Josh

  • Would highly recommend! G-Sync Works Great!
Keep in mind this (part of the) review is just my first impressions. First off, this display is beautiful when upgrading from a Acer G226HQL 21.5-Inch Screen LED Monitor (shown in pictures the Pixio is set to photo mode and the acer is set to graphics to give the monitors a fair comparison). The ips display is beautiful and vibrant even when its set to its more muted brighter fps mode. The blacks are also quite rich. The veiwing angles on this thing are amazing. Shows a clear image no matter where i stand. This display is also super bright. I would argue the display is brighter or equally as bright as the LED panel on the acer. As for the HDR setting, I personally don't notice a difference whether its on or off. I've just been keeping on for the time being. The bezels are quite thin measuring in at about 1 cm. The build quality is sturdy. I would rate the plastic poly-carbonate material used at about a medium quality. Not the best material i have felt but not cheap feeling either. The overall design is appealing to the eye with minimal branding on the front. The stand is sturdy but not adjustable, but the monitor is vesa mount compatible so you can easily swap it out as i plan to do in the future. There are also no signs of dead pixels. I did my research before I bought from this newer, unheard of, brand. I fell in love with their mission statement. Every single review on their products in the 12 or so reviews I watched was positive. They are delivering high spec products with minimal to no compromises at a fraction of the cost. Would highly recommend. Edit: After continued use i have had no major qualms with the product whatsoever. Though i have noticed one quirk of the product that should be able to be fixed later on with a firmware update. For some reason the monitor wont let you switch input and goes directly into sleep mode if you have removed the cable you were using between your last use. This can be annoying if you usually use a display port and you move the monitor into another room to use with a device that uses hdmi. You would have to switch the input manually before you move the monitor to get around this quirk. But lets be honest, most ppl will just plug in their monitor once and not mess with it again. As far a G-Sync compatibly is concerned i have seen no issues whatsoever. Seems to be working perfectly. Been testing it with fortnite, dauntless, AC: Odyssey, and trover saves the universe. I was also surprised to find how accurate the color comparison image was in the marketing. I tested this by viewing the worse color accurate image in the example on my Acer LED monitor and the Pixio at the same time. I have added a picture of this comparison to my review. In conclusion, this is the best ips monitor at this price range at 1440p 27in. If thats what your looking for i can’t recommend this enough. The 95hz is an added bonus. Would love to pick up another sometime in the future Year 1 Update: I still love this monitor. The HDR looks amazing in games like Destiny 2, though windows 10 still is quite unstable with its HDR implementation. If your graphic settings support it, make sure to switch your default dynamic output from limited to full. The difference is night and day. 12bit color no longer appears as an option, but thats probably my fault for trying to overclock it. Got a replacement arm stand which greatly help my posture and was a worthwile upgrade. Would still recommened this monitor to learning designers who are interested in gaming on the side or vice-versa. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2019 by Brandon Kleeman Brandon Kleeman

  • Fantastic "Hybrid" monitor concept
This review is broken up into categories, so feel free to skip to what interests you! History: So, it's been about a year now trying to decide on the perfect gaming monitor for my wife and I. We've been using budget gaming 1080p 24" monitors from Asus/Acer for years now. I was ready for something truly better overall for both of us, but the choice is hard. At first, I was looking primarily at 24" 1440p 144hz monitors. In fact, I grabbed a Dell S2417DG on Black Friday 2018 after some moderate research. I wanted a $500+ panel, but at $299, I thought the Dell would give at least as good image quality as my current TN Asus with better response rate. Then if I got something better later, I could give my wife the Dell. However, the Dell had horrible issues with Contrast, Banding, and Gamma. Tweaking Gamma/Contrast & Applying Color corrective profiles made banding horrible! And even with the colors more accurate, they were severely muted. Increasing them in software just creates more banding and clipping. What a mess! I also realized the 1440p and 24" does not work well in this day and age. Windows 10 scaling is crap, and various games have various issues with interfacing sizing, etc. I got tired of this nonsense and decided to start researching again. Months of research went by and prices were coming down. But honestly, I was scared to buy another TN panel. Sure, they can have fantastic response rates, but finding one that actually has a good picture/color seemed difficult. IPS and VA just look better. VA seemed like a good option, but I didn't really want curved, the Samsung Q70's stand wouldn't work for me, and VA seemed to be back to bad response unless it was the Quantum Dot. So, I nixed the cheaper VAs. So that left the IPS panels. Any 1440p 144hz IPS panel was $400+, and I was almost willing to do it.... But then I kept coming back to this Pixio. I had watched it release and get great reviews, and it always hovered at $260. If I could live with IPS glow and getting "only" 95Hz, it seemed like the perfect option. At least something that will hold us over for 5 years while gaming monitor tech improves. (Can't wait for OLED 144Hz+ to be a feasible thing once they fix burn in) So, I pulled the trigger and ordered two Pixio PX275h. I justified the 95Hz in a few ways. 1. We're not pro gamers, and we don't play FPS that often. 2. Image Quality is more important the slightly more speed 3. 95hz with a good response rate should be clear enough 4. We don't buy top end video cards and like to max our settings, so at 1440p, many games won't average much over 100FPS anyways. 5. The 30-95Hz Freesync range is fantastic and better for strategy games than the 48-144, were it flickers when you drop below 48FPS. Build Quality (6.5/10): First off, after buying and receiving 2 of these monitors, I had to buy a 3rd to replace one of the first two, as it had 2 bad pixels and some kind of splotch inside the screen. That one also had a misaligned stand mount so it was a paint to get it assembled. So it loses a point for the defective model. The physical build of the monitor is fine. Nothing premium or low end, just average, which is fine. The stand is fairly sturdy, and save for the difficulty of getting one of them on due to misalignment of the backer plastic, work fine. Could it be better? Definitely. But at this price point, I’m just happy it’s metal, sleek, not creaky. The screen stays stable on the table, which is fine. Would’ve liked a more adjustable stand like the Dell had, but I do like the look and feel of this simple metal stand. The OSD is a mixed bag. While it has most of the adjustments I’d like, it’s a learning curve to use. The buttons are stiff and feel kind of cheap. They layout of the buttons isn’t horrible, but isn’t terribly intuitive either. I’m also taking points off her due to 1 out of 3 panels having defects. Image Quality (8.5/10): This is why we went IPS. The Image Quality is FANTASTIC! Brightness and Contrast are great, but colors are what really pop, looking real and not over saturated. We do a lot of photo editing, so we were hoping that this would be the case, and it is! My only complaint on the colors are the OSD color adjustments. When you do user adjustment, you get an RGB scale from 0 to 100, but going from the starting point, 50, to 49 or 51 makes a massive difference! It should be much smaller increments. Also, tweaking these seem to mess up different shades of gray. I found 51 on red and 49 on green to be our sweet spot for a slightly warm look but still neutral look. So why only 8.5? Well, 0.5 off for the OSD color adjustment issue, and the other 1.0 off due to mild IPS Glow and mild color banding. First, I expected IPS glow, and all three monitors had about the same amount of glow coming from the bottom two corners. It’s pretty much as expected, not better or worse, but I still take off a point because it does hinder dark scene quality. Then there’s the banding. It’s not bad, don’t get me wrong, but I expected gradients to be perfect. WAY better than the Dell S2417DG, but not as good as I’d expect on an 8-bit IPS panel. Now, I am using Display Port not HDMI, so that may be part of it. I cannot select 10bpc even though it appears as an option. This also means I can’t use HDR, which is fine, as I don’t particularly care about. Viewing Angles are very good. But overall, the panel as a whole looks fantastic 98% of the time, and I’m happy I went IPS with current options. Motion/Gaming (7.5/10) So this was the big one for me. A monitor needs to look good, but for gaming, I really wanted smooth motion and retained sharpness during motion. I really didn’t want to take a step back from the Dell S2417DG, but with IPS or VA, there was no choice without spending a boatload. But I’m fairly happy with how the screen handles motion. Just using my eye, I can tell that moving objects are not quite as sharp as the Dell was. But it is leaps and bounds better than my old 60hz TN panel. But smoothness is great. Freesync works to keep FPS stutters less noticeable, and artifacts such as ghosting or inversion are minimal. I use the “High” option for response rate. That being said, side by side with a good 144Hz IPS panel, I’m sure you’d notice the difference in fast paced action. So the question for the buyer becomes is it worth the added cost? If this monitor is as good as a $450 IPS 144hz with the same specs, save for the slower 95hz, then is it worth the 70% added cost for a 50% high potential frame rate? For me, the answer was no. Had the 144hz version of this screen be available and $350 or less, I would have gone for that. So the conclusion here is that it is significantly better than 60hz, but not quite as good as a good 144hz IPS panel. No surprises there. Sounds Quality: Who Cares? I wish it had been $10 less and not included speakers. What a waste on a screen like this! I guess it’s for LAN parties or for content creators who need just occasional audio, but I feel that 99.9% of users of a screen like this will use dedicated speakers or headphones.\ Conclusion: If you want to get particular about your screen, there is no perfect technology out there. OLED promises to be the future, but not yet, and they still have to fix burn in issues. For now, you have to decide between 1 of the 3 flawed panel types out there. If I could spend $400-500 on a screen and get a perfect 1440p 144hz monitor with no motion blur, no backlight bleed/IPS Glow, perfect color/contrast/black levels, and perfect viewing angles, I would. But even at $600-800, you don’t get perfection, and that’s a shame. But if you want a gaming panel that just compromises a little bit here or there without any major glaring flaws, this is a good option! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2019 by James Kirk

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