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ViewSonic OMNI XG2705 27 Inch 1080p 1ms 144Hz IPS Gaming Monitor with FreeSync Premium, Eye Care, Advanced Ergonomics, HDMI and DP for Esports

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Style: 27-Inch 144Hz


Features

  • ESPORTS MONITOR: Full HD 1080p resolution, 1ms (MPRT) response time, and 144Hz refresh rate gives you the edge in all your matches
  • AMD FREESYNC PREMIUM: AMD FreeSync Premium technology enables fluid and tear-free gameplay
  • AMAZING AT ANY ANGLE: An IPS panel ensures stunning views no matter your vantage point
  • SMOOTH GAMING: 1ms (MPRT) response time delivers esports-grade performance with seamless pixel transitions and reduced ghosting
  • ALL DAY COMFORT: Fully adjustable ergonomic stand delivers the comfort you need for marathon gaming sessions
  • FLEXIBLE CONNECTIVITY: The XG2705 supports laptops, PCs, Macs, PlayStation, and Xbox with HDMI and DisplayPort inputs
  • INCLUDED IN THE BOX: LCD Monitor, Power Cable, HDMI, and Quick Start Guide

Description

The ViewSonic XG2705 is a 27'' Full HD IPS monitor built with the speed and performance that gamers need. Featuring a 144Hz refresh rate and AMD FreeSync Premium technology, this monitor virtually eliminates screen tearing and stuttering for fluid game play during fast-paced action scenes. An ultra-fast 1ms (MPRT) response time also provides smooth screen performance free from blurring or ghosting. For multi-display setups, a three-sided borderless design maximizes viewing size while minimizing frame distractions. Flexible connectivity options such as DisplayPort and HDMI allow you to connect to your PC and gaming console.


Screen Size: 27 Inches


Display Resolution Maximum: 1920 x 1080


Brand: ViewSonic


Special Feature: Anti Glare


Refresh Rate: 144


Standing screen display size: ‎27 Inches


Screen Resolution: ‎1920x1080


Max Screen Resolution: ‎1920 x 1080


Number of USB 2.0 Ports: ‎1


Brand: ‎ViewSonic


Series: ‎XG2705 27'' 144Hz Gaming Monitor


Item model number: ‎XG2705


Item Weight: ‎16.5 pounds


Product Dimensions: ‎21.35 x 9.4 x 24.1 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎21.35 x 9.4 x 24.1 inches


Color: ‎Black


Power Source: ‎10


Voltage: ‎240 Volts


Manufacturer: ‎ViewSonic


Language: ‎English


Date First Available: ‎March 5, 2020


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Beautiful and excellent multi-use monitor, but very expensive.
Style: 32-Inch 144Hz 4K G-Sync
This is a comprehensive review is for the ViewSonic XG321UG Pros: ++ Full Array Local Dimming, 1152 zones, mini LED ++ H.D.R. 1400 ++ NVIDIA G-Sync Ultimate + NVIDIA Reflex ++ 144Hz native refresh rate ++ 32" 4K IPS with 100% sRGB, 99% Adobe, and 98% DCI-P3 coverage ++ Clear and excellent O.S.D. Cons: -- As close as you'll get, but "not an absolute perfect image" when compared to OLED. -- Some blooming effects due to the FALD, but can be adjusted -- Very expensive [INTRO] I was in the market for a 32" 4K display. I first purchased the LG 32GQ950-B at a good deal around $1000 since that monitor normally sells for $1300. However, due to a washed out HDR color issue and auto dimming problem it has, I returned that monitor and purchased the $2500 ViewSonic XG321UG. Now, I bring this up because I will be comparing the LG to the ViewSonic to help you on what to look out for and why the XG321UG came out on top. [FALD] This monitor features 1152 mini LEDs that grant Full Array Local Dimming. The 1152 zone FALD is what gives this monitor its OLED like qualities. When something is black on the screen, it is truly black! In other words, it is as black as when the monitor is off, exactly like an OLED. I have never seen this before on a non-OLED monitor and it is absolutely awesome. I also did not see any kind of local dimming issues I saw with the LG or other monitors where the local dimming causes a slow dimming/brightness issue when the screen has a 50% white image and a 50% dark image. What you will see is the white portion of the screen getting brighter and darker repeatedly because the monitor can't decide on a brightness level. No issue with the ViewSonic. Now having said that, it is still not perfect like an OLED. When you run the mouse cursor over a dark area, you will see a blooming effect around the cursor which is due to the mini LEDs turning on in that area. Though this blooming effect is noticeable, you can adjust this by decreasing the black levels of the monitor which essentially turns the FALD to "always on" to four different brightness levels to compensate for this. I leave the blackness level adjusted to off. [HDR] The HDR on this monitor is absolutely a sight to see. With 1400 Max nits and the FALD going simultaneously, images, dark movies with bright lights or explosions, games, you name it all look stunning and where this monitor really shines. As I mentioned before, the LG i purchased before had a problem with its HDR mode. Basically, when HDR was on and in Windows, all the colors would be very washed out. If you tried to compensate for the color in Windows or Nvidia settings, those colors would stack on top causing an over saturation issue in games. The ViewSonic monitor does not have that problem. Colors look great as you would expect consistently from one thing to the other. Plus this monitor still gives you the bility to adjust the color when in HDR mode. The LG would lock you out of the color settings. [OVERALL] This monitor comes with all the bells and whistles. It has awesome HDR, awesome black levels thanks to the FALD, 4K, G-SYNC, 144HZ, you name it. I purchased this monitor over the ASUS ROG Swift PG32UQX, simply because both monitors have the same technology, but the ViewSonic is $500 less expensive. Of course, you are still paying for it at $2500. However, if you are like me and use this monitor for school or anything that requires static images for long periods of time, you don't have to worry about burn in issues like an OLED, yet you can still get beautiful blackness levels of an OLED. Also wanted to mention the menu OSD. Both the LG and the ViewSonic had easy and clear on screen displays. Anyways, I hope this review educated you on what to expect when a monitor uses HDR mode and how local dimming can effect the display. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2023 by Allan J

  • Not bad, but don't use the 60hz strobe mode.
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
Okay so I got this because of the strobe mode. I am a gamer at heart, but I got into actually testing monitors on my free time especially when companies like RTINGs has a stupid vote system instead of just buying all and working hard.... I mean their job is reviews but they still limit themselves which doesn't make sense. Then you have youtubers which will lie about a product because they got it for free, calling a bad monitor "good" for the sake of not making the monitor maker "overlord" mad at them for a bad review. "no more free products if you say this monitor is crap" type of deal. Which generally gives RTINGs the upper hand as they buy all their displays for testing. No way for manufacturers to influence the review process with a heavy hand. So, where to start. Its an "fast IPS" 1080p 240hz display. The fit and finish is nice. I had zero dead pixels. The color is quite bad, but I have a tuning device which allows me to get more accurate color! So I color calibrated using my x-rite iDisplay pro (you can buy them here on amazon like me!) and got that sorted out.... You can find a post on BlurBusters forums where I did 240hz pixel response testing. Its pretty good. Not as fast as say an $800 LG nano-ips monitor, but fast enough compared to other monitors even some 200-300 bucks more expensive. FOR THE PRICE, this monitor is an absolute champ. I also took the blurbusters advice on the flicker backlight. This monitor, you can download a custom program from the viewsonic website which is in collaboration with blurbusters, where you can tweak the purexp settings, you can not only run through the preset modes, but you can also run a custom mode where you are given varying degrees of adjustment that most other monitors do not give you. WITH THAT IN MIND, I tried out the factory 240hz mode with the purexp enabled. Didn't seem all that special. To me, it felt like my old Alienware TN panel at 240hz without flicker backlight. I would say you probably don't even need purexp at 240hz. If you are someone who cannot use flicker backlight due to sensitivity, then don't. This monitor even without flickering at 240hz is pretty good. BUT, I also tried the 120hz mode using "large vertical pixel totals" using a custom resolution. This is to test to see if the custom mode works well enough or not. AND I HAVE TO BE HONEST, the 120hz with a custom flicker setting, works BETTER than 240hz with and without purexp enabled. I can say the motion CLARITY is amazing using this custom mode. However, you have to know how to setup a custom resolution to get this mode to work. Anyway, the motion clarity is INSANE. Its just that good. I can't believe how good it is! Playing FPS titles like Call of Duty, Battlefield, Halo, its way better than 240hz. I mean way better. Now on that note, and yes I am splitting this part, this is a warning. The 60hz mode for flicker. Don't use it. I don't care how much blurbusters boasts how amazing it is for console gaming. The 60hz flicker WILL hurt your eyes. Even doing the "large vertical pixel totals" to further tweak 60hz strobing, doesn't help. I enabled this mode and sure enough, my eyes started hurting INSTANTLY. I LITERALLY could not look at the monitor. I would wince and recoil at how bad the flickering is. Now don't get me wrong, I can handle flicker. I used to party with people with tons of strobe lights in the room listening to house/dubstep/trance/dnb/etc. This is WORSE. Your eyes just don't want to look at the screen. I even started having my eye water it was so bad. The 120hz mode, no issue, but 60hz mode, killing me. So don't use it. This is a warning. On the whole, for about 300-330 this monitor is amazing. I could honestly say I would pay MORE for this monitor if they included the "large vertical total" mode as part of the EDID information so users wouldn't have to go through the trouble of running a custom resolution to do it. The motion clarity you get is just THAT AMAZING. I could see in the future when Display Port 2.0 finally releases both in monitors and graphics cards, that we could get large vertical totals for 240hz which would make that even more amazing (need the higher bandwidth to do it. currently you are locked at about 120hz to 144hz with large vertical totals due to bandwidth limitations of HDMI2.0 and DP1.4). I would highly recommend this monitor to anyone in this price bracket. If you can afford more, obviously there are better displays out there. But for the price, amazing. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 26, 2021 by namco

  • Best 1080p 240hz IPS panel
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
BUY THIS OVER ALL OTHER CHEAP 240hz MONITORS. This is the first monitor I have ever used that its fastest response time did not cause inverse ghosting (aka The image is really clear with the 0.5ms fastest mode). The screens colors are really vibrant because of the IPS panel and thankfully my monitor has barely any blacklight bleed (this is lucky). The monitors image clarity is top tier even competing with OLEDs and 360hz+ IPS and TN panels way above its price point. In other words this is the best 1080p 240hz monitor you can buy. Other than the display itself the stand is premium and works really well. The control buttons are trash but once you have the best settings dialed in your good to go. 5/5 100% recommended. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2023 by Brian Barnard

  • best monitor I purchased since 2016
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
best monitor I purchased ever since 2016 I started with TN . then want use dual monitor purchased ips . TN + IPS I seen how bad TN colors compare to IPS . I decided will replace TN to IPS but that time only have 27 inch 1080p 144hz ips . 24 inch 144hz ips was not available or not in market yet. purchased VA, VA really not bad colors but strong colors I not like. and 2 Different monitors or colors annoyed me . checked I was happy to have 1080p 144hz 24 ich monitor purchased another lPS Asus monitor . but seems picked bad ips . to use IPS + IPS . Asus was really bad colors this best monitor colors I purchased ever since 2016.my rate 10\10 now with dual 2 ips I have to match colors. but If I can't ? will buy second VviewsSonic OMNI xG2431 without a doubt ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2023 by Fahad.PSP

  • The monitor for the people with deep pockets and want 4K HDR but not a TV on their desk
Style: 32-Inch 144Hz 4K G-Sync
Pros: + Extremely bright. It's rated for DisplayHDR1400 but it reports it can go up to 1565 + Very high color volume. It can give very pure RGB primaries at any luminance level unlike WRGB OLED TVs + 1152-zone FALD is actually fine-grained enough to make a good experience even on the desktop with multiple windows. On the older 384-zone displays, the the zones were too largely to effectively engage. + 144Hz 10-bit color using DisplayPort DSC + Decently fast LCD panel once it warms up. Easily keeps up with 144Hz refresh rate. + Slightly higher native contrast ratio than the older 27" FALD panels + More efficient than the older 27" DisplayHDR1000. I'm measuring 10% less for the same scene due to more effective dimming despite 40% more screen area to light up. + Almost non-existent fan noise. I have to put my ear to the panel to hear it. The panel does get hot in HDR usage but it seems to be designed to run hot since the LCD response times are bad when cold. Sounds great, right? But I have to take a star off because it's a $2500 monitor and it's not perfect. 1) Local dimming issues - There are three backlight dimming modes and they're just labeled #1, #2, #3. #1 is the gaming mode that has the most aggressive dimming without any attempt to reduce haloing. #2 fixes some of the haloing but causes flickering from sudden gamma changes when a large patch of the screen goes black (i.e. scene transition in a movie). #3 quadruples the size of the dimming zones to reduce obvious haloing but then the monitor dims worse than the 384-zone predecessors. - The default #2 dimming mode seems to adjust zone aggressiveness based on how bright the total display output is, hence the flickering on bright colors when a portion of the screen suddenly goes black. - Haloing can get pretty obvious with #1 and even #2 on desktop with large patches of flat color elements because of the zone size. You may want to adjust your themes to avoid dark solid colors because your mouse will cause halos as well. The algorithm actually handles black better than dark colors. -Comparing outputs, mode #1 preserves the most shadow detail and should be used whenever possible. 2) Panel issues - The 32" panel has worse horizontal and vertical viewing angles compared to the older 27" AUO FALD panels. This is particularly obvious with the monitor an arm's length away and the left/right 1/4 are visibly darker than the center. - The new panel glows a little more than the older panel but you should keep FALD on to avoid this 3) Firmware issues - Poor color options. You have sRGB, Bluish, Native, Warm, and User. At least offer a pre-calibrated temperature selection. The monitor is a little too blue compared to all my other devices and I have to fiddle with the RGB channels in user to fix it. - Only the lowest 'Standard' overdrive option is usable. Everything else has huge overshoot especially when the panel is warm. Even when the panel is warm and running 'Standard', dark and light transitions are a little too slow. I've attached two photos. First set is KSP 2 trailer with local dimming on/off. Local dimming has no downsides here. Second is an HDR night scene with local dimming on/off. The second set is probably the worst case you'll ever see with this monitor since the video is blown out with the highlights being painfully and unrealistically bright against very dark backgrounds. The last photo is For All Mankind in HDR showing the dynamic range of the monitor. No blooming issues in this series. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2022 by J J

  • Best 240hz 1080p Pannel
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
This pannel is better than all other monitors I have used in the past. The Pure XP (motion blur reduction) technology is fantastic. The response times are phenomenal. Pros: Pure XP Fantastic Response time Picture clarity IPS pannel Excellent Ui under 300$ Best 240hz 1080p pannel regardless of price Cons: Navigating ui is a bit weird with the dongles ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2023 by Felix Zemdegs

  • Almost perfect.
Style: Curved 34-Inch 200Hz
Other than some basic things that a software update could fix, and the joystick being odd in it's function (click it and it turns off the display, push it down to get into menu) The display does have the normal limitations of a high end VA panel. There is slight ghosting, though when gaming I never notice it, only when surfing pages, and only certain colors really make it noticeable. The colors are amazing, and if your eyes don't burn out from the brightness, the HDR1400 is also amazing. It is worth mentioning that you have to run at a lower refresh rate to have 10-bit color, and even lower to get 12-bit. Though you can run full speed and have 8-bit with dithering, and if gaming, I double most will even notice. It is a great alternative to an OLED if you are still warry of burn-in. I do believe the price is a little high, if it were priced more competitively, the small issues could be overlooked. As it is priced now (1499 USD) it should be flawless. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2023 by Jamie Goodwin

  • Fast
Style: 25 Inch 280Hz FHD
He wanted fast he got it. 280 hz I believe. He's happy which makes me happy. He says the graphics are out of this world.
Reviewed in the United States on August 31, 2023 by Kimberly Mello

  • Great picture
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
Very nice came when supposed too
Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2023 by Chris

  • El mejor para juegos
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
Para transmitir y jugar es el mejor demasiada calidad
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • Beautiful Picture, but has QC Frustrations, and Loses to OLED on Price and Backlight Bleed
Style: 32-Inch 144Hz 4K G-Sync
I have received two of these monitors, and both have either arrived with defects or developed them after-the-fact. The first one had a spot on the monitor which looked like a large splotch of dead pixels. Based on my understanding of the way the monitor works, I suspect it was actually a defective spot on the Q-Dot layer or a defective mini-LED. In any case, I returned it and ordered a replacement. The replacement also had minor defects on arrival. There was one tiny dead pixel, and the joystick for navigating the menus had the propensity to get "stuck" in the right position rather than re-centering correctly. As these problems were relatively minor, I overlooked them. However, after the seller's return window had expired, the monitor developed a software issue where the wrong settings would be applied at every startup. Fortunately, the Viewsonic support team was helpful, and was able to help solve the problem remotely. Other than these issues, the picture quality is very nice. The large size and resolution are luxurious. HDR has bright brights and dark darks, G-Sync Ultimate functions as intended, and the depth of color provided by the Q-Dot layer is beautiful. The defects could be considered a tax on being at the bleeding edge of monitor technology, given how few 4K high-refresh-rate monitors exist with Mini-LED technology. However, Mini-LED is debatably already on the way out, with strong competition from QD-OLED that isn't going anywhere. The Mini-LED backlighting is indeed superior to the old system of backlighting zones, but there is still a halo-ing effect on dark backgrounds, unlike the per-pixel brightness control of OLED panels. Pixel response times are also slower than OLED. Despite my frustrations, I would still recommend it for someone seeking higher peak brightness and better longevity compared to QD-OLED panels. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2022 by Nelson

  • Great for gaming/videos not for the rest of the computer
Style: 32-Inch 144Hz 4K G-Sync
I was looking to replace my 2x24" 1080P monitors I have had for many years. I decided I wanted a 4K gaming monitor. I consume content and game on my system so I had a very specific need of 4K for content consumption and high refresh for gaming. In doing my research I found at the time of this review only 2 monitors that do 4K, have a high refresh and have mini-LED technology. I decided to take the jump into Mini-LED, since TV's that have it have great reviews of their picture. This monitor is capable of making a beautiful, breath taking picture especially for HDR. The big problem I have with this monitor (and why I returned it) is the haloing effect you get in darker areas mainly around the mouse. I 1st noticed this in the dark-mode setting for the OS (I saw this both on Windows and Linux). This is an issue with this monitor, and I have seen it on reviews for the other Mini-LED monitor (Asus PG32UQX). I think some reviews mention both of these monitors might use the same panel. After experiencing the haloing 1st hand out of the box, I spend a week making adjustments to the brightness/contrast or modifying my OS themes to minimize the haloing. The only way to get rid of the haloing was to run a lite theme everywhere possible or turn up the brightness to the max setting. This monitor can become blindingly bright so max brightness is not an option. To simplify the issue to those reading this review; If your mouse is in an area that’s not perfect black, or not a very light color you will have a halo around your mouse and it will come and go as you move the mouse around the lighting sections of the monitor. It will also popup after stopping the mouse and having it sit stationary over a darkish section of the screen. Chrome’s gray background from their dark-mode setting and Powershell’s default blue console are 2 examples if where you can easily see the halo. However the perfect black from the sides of YouTube videos does not produce this halo effect. At 1st I was thinking I was being too sensitive to the haloing and that I can live with it. I stared some of my mouse clicking games (Sims4, and Warhammer 40K Marytr). The mouse halo is still there in those games (this haloing was happening in the brighter Sims area too). If you play games that don’t require a mouse arrow to control the game then you will be fine. However if you play a game that requires a mouse arrow (Sims, RTS games, etc) then you will have the mouse halo in your game. During a system reboot I noticed the halo effect was there for the spinning dots that Windows has when restarting the machine. Due to my background I had a red shutdown screen with the white dots spinning and there was the halo affect again around the dots and white lettering for the shutdown message. This was my final straw and decided to return the monitor. Mini-LED is capable of creating a truly amazing picture. Teaming this monitor up with an HDR game will blow you away with how good your games can look. At the time of this review Mini-LED monitors are at a 1.0/early adopter phase and they need to work on the haloing. The mouse halo and the haloing I can see in some other parts of my day to day use of the computer really showed how early on we are for Mini-LED monitors. The mouse halo was just the start as I played with the monitor settings I found the “Variable BL Mode” setting. This is a setting you can use to help adjust the haloing. In one setting I found the mouse was just one of many halos I had on my screen. I had smaller halos around scroll bars or some text in the different windows I had. There is potential for Mini-LED monitors in the future but they are not there yet for those of us who want things darker or play mouse clicking style games. I give this overall a 2 star review as this monitor is capable of making a beautiful image to look at. For the price point (~$2500) the amount of haloing you get is just too much. I would expect some imperfections/issues but the haloing it just too much for me. Maybe in a year or 2 Mini-LED will be an option. Just not today. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2022 by Keepa

  • CRT level motion clarity
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
You must use large vertical totals and adjust the strobe width, strobe phase, and overdrive using the strobe utility ViewSonic makes available to get the magic out of this monitor. The motion performance is fine without doing anything but enabling PureXP, but at that point you could consider other options. Once the LVT and strobe have been adjusted however, there is no choice but this monitor. Comparing a CRT (GDM-FW900) at 85Hz side by side with the XG2431@85Hz, the picture on the XG2431 is arguably better. The CRT still has motion trails from bright white while the XG2431 has no trails and only the smallest, faintest blurring at the top and bottom of the screen. You will not notice these artifacts in game. The picture is also obviously sharper than the CRT. Otherwise the motion clarity is identical and in that way obsoletes the CRT whose advantages are now only deeper blacks in a dark room and smoothed low resolutions. You will however pay for motion clarity with brightness just like on a CRT. Adjusting the strobe width about 3/4 of the way with a very slight amount of additional blur vs the ideal 1/2 strobe width is a good sweet spot since it's so faint and relegated to the top and bottom of the screen. If your main priority in buying a CRT monitor is motion clarity don't even bother. Just buy this monitor and save yourself 80lbs and a significant amount of money. On that note however it should be made explicit. I would not have bought this monitor had it not been for the included utility. Without the additional adjustments from the utility the monitor is average. It's clear but it's not CRT clear and therefore not worth purchasing when I could compromise with other monitors or TVs that have motion problems too but higher resolutions, better colors etc and use a CRT when motion clarity matters. Monitor manufacturers take notice and allow full strobe/overdrive adjustment. There is no reason to not to allow it and furthermore, it should be adjustable through the OSD rather than through a program. The fact that ViewSonic isn't releasing a utility for every monitor they make, or at the very least the gaming monitors, is unbelievable because it is the only reason I even considered purchasing a monitor from them. Why bother when you could buy monitors with 4k resolution, bigger screen, or OLEDs with way better color? If monitor manufacturers on a wider scale would do what was done with this one monitor CRTs could finally be retired. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2022 by anon

  • Worth the price, great product for money
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
good quality, well worth the price
Reviewed in the United States on August 15, 2023 by D. Pelikan

  • Grate all round
Style: 24-Inch 240Hz
Has nice color accuracy and clarity if you are looking for a good monitor for fps games this thing it grate
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2023 by CARTER

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