Alienware's 500Hz 1080p gaming monitor is yours for $829 because of course it's unfeasibly expensive

Alienware 500Hz
(Image credit: Alienware)

At some point, the returns on higher refresh rates must surely diminish. But not yet. Enter Alienware's 500Hz gaming monitor, yours for $829.

The Asus has been promising a 500Hz screen since Computex—but this is the first time anyone has managed to hit that refresh rate with an IPS rather than TN .

It's a 25-inch model and, inevitably given the refresh rate, runs 1920 by 1080 pixels. So, it's an out-and-out esports built for speed rather than pretty graphics.

On that note, Alienware is claiming 0.5ms gray-to-gray response, which is exceptional. The catch is that it is also claiming 1ms for gray-to-gray response. Confused? Us too. 

More specifically, Alienware says the 1ms figure is for gray-to-gray "extreme" response, where the 0.5ms pertains to gray-to-gray "min" response. Whatever. No doubt this is a very quick by IPS standards. But it'll still be miles off the response of an OLED .

It's something of a niche tool, then, this new Alienware . It's 1080p on a 25-inch , so image clarity isn't a priority. And yet it bigs up the IPS thing, which implies image quality is important. 

Screen queens

(Image credit: Future)

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Then it gives you 500Hz refresh, which is great for latency and beats out any OLED monitor by some distance. But it doesn't come close to an OLED for pixel response, however you want to measure it. 

And it's over $800. Ouch. 

Really, this new Alienware mostly serves to confirm how fragmented the monitor market is. When you consider factors like refresh rate, response, brightness, contrast, black levels, color accuracy, pixel density and so on, you have to accept that no one tech delivers it all.

Currently, LCD monitors offer the best refresh rates and latency, mini-LED models the best brightness, OLED the best lighting control and pixel speed. But if it's latency you prize above all else, and that $829 price tag isn't an issue, well, you know what to do.

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Jeremy Laird
Hardware writer

Jeremy has been writing about technology and PCs since the 90nm Netburst era (Google it!) and enjoys nothing more than a serious dissertation on the finer points of monitor input lag and overshoot followed by a forensic examination of advanced lithography. Or maybe he just likes machines that go “ping!” He also has a thing for tennis and cars.