- Cloud Networking
How to Calculate the Total Cost of Ownership for Meraki
28 Mar, 2026







£1016.70 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £847 ex-VAT, the ASUS ROG Strix OLED XG32UCWG is a “serious money, serious intent” monitor. If you’re a team running high-end creative work (video/post, color-sensitive design) or heavy esports/PC gaming, OLED’s punchy contrast and near-instant pixel response are genuinely noticeable day-to-day. It’ll feel premium in a way standard IPS panels don’t—especially in dark scenes and mixed-content workflows where you don’t want washed blacks. For a B2B reseller buyer, it’s also the kind of screen that makes sense if the customer can actually justify frequent high-performance use rather than treating the monitor as an afterthought.
That said, I wouldn’t recommend it for everyone. OLED is still more “care and policy” than a normal office spec: static elements, long spreadsheets, and always-on desktop taskbars can raise burn-in concerns over time unless the organisation is disciplined with usage and display settings. If your customer mostly does office productivity, lots of static dashboards, or a role that’s effectively 8–10 hours of the same UI, you’ll likely get a better long-term value from a more conservative LED-backlit option. In short: buy it for customers who live in gaming/creative content and will manage screen longevity; think twice if it’s mainly general office use where reliability and low-maintenance are the priority.

Dell
Dell 27 Monitor - SE2725HM

LG Electronics
LG UltraGear 32GS75Q-B - LED monitor - gaming - 32" (31.5" viewable) - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 180 Hz - IPS - 400 cd/m� - 1200:1 - DisplayHDR 400 - 1 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort

Asus
ASUS ProArt PA348CGV - LED monitor - 34" - 3440 x 1440 WQHD @ 120 Hz - IPS - 400 cd/m� - 1000:1 - DisplayHDR 400 - 2 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C - speakers - black

AOC
AOC Q32E4U - E4 Series - LED monitor - 32" (31.5" viewable) - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 100 Hz - IPS - 1000:1 - 4 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - black