ASUS RoG Swift PG35VQ Monitor review

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Viewing Angle - Color Temperature Offset - Power Consumption

Viewing Angle & Color Temperature Offset

Monitors are often advertised as having a viewing angle of somewhere between 140 and 165 degrees. This means that you can still see what's on the display if you are looking at it at 70 to 83 degrees from the side. However, most of the time, you will be sitting roughly straight in front of the screen, which means that you are looking at 0 degrees to the center of the screen and, at most, 45 degrees to the sides. Compared to the advertised viewing angle, it is much more relevant that the display does not change brightness or color in the corners. Above, a 0% view angle, we look directly at the screen. Below, the viewing angle at sharper horizontally positioned camera angles. At an angle of almost 40 degrees here's where TN panels normally run into issues, IPS and VA are way better in this respect.  


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Photos absolutely blow to show the effect properly, when you look at brightness and discoloration alongside the viewing angle then that will tell you something about the image quality when you are not looking straight at the screen. TN screens would show discoloration to some degree whereas IPS and VA screens are less sensitive to that. Viewing angles for monitors are relative and a fairly subjective thing, as I assume you'll be sitting directly in front of your monitor.

Overall rating, good.


Temperature offset to 6500K

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We approach color precision in a simple to understand way and to explain the method, this test is simple. We look at how close the screen is to a color temperature of 6500 Kelvin based on the default color space. This test is done at default monitor settings. The screen, however, has many presets you can choose from and some very specific RGB color control preferences. The sky is the limit. In the chart above, the lower the value is, the closer the screen is to 6500 Kelvin. 

Power consumption


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We measure power consumption measured in three ways. A white screen, a black screen and then in standby/power-down mode. We measure at 100% brightness which is the maximum output and thus power consumption.

At 60% brightness (default) in a colorful desktop the monitor consumes roughly 70 Watts.


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Idle or sleep power consumption has improved over the years for most technology due to US and EU legislation at 0.1 Watts. Close but no cigar. After the PC is turned off, the power consumption sticks at 38 Watts for about 15 minutes. After that moment deep sleep kicks in, powering down the hardware. 

And yes, leave RGB functionality ON and the monitor consumes 3 to 4 watts, that's the stuff that is eating away at your electricity bill. 


Dead pixel check

On inspection, we found no dead or stuck pixels.

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