- Cyber Security
BYOD and Cyber Essentials Plus: Managing Personal Devices
17 Jun, 2026







£1135.58 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
At £946 ex-VAT for a 24-inch Full HD ASUS ROG Swift Pro PG248QP, I can’t call this good value. The “Pro” positioning is clearly aimed at esports/competitive users who care about motion handling, but the panel resolution is the real sticking point: you’re paying flagship money for a setup that won’t look as crisp as QHD or higher on the same screen size. If you’re doing serious desktop work alongside gaming, you’ll feel that trade-off every day. If this is purely for competitive play at a desk, you’re still left wondering why you wouldn’t spend less or step up resolution for the same budget.
Who *should* buy it: players who are already committed to 1080p for consistent performance, run a high-refresh competitive rig, and specifically want ASUS’s ROG features/experience with premium build and tuning. Who *shouldn’t*: anyone who wants one monitor to cover mixed use (work + modern titles), anyone sensitive to text clarity, or buyers shopping on value—because at this price you’re close to “better long-term” options where the image quality gap is harder to justify. Unless you’ve tested one and can point to a very specific advantage for your use case, I’d treat this as an enthusiastic buy for niche competitive setups, not a sensible default.

Iiyama
iiyama ProLite X2493HSU-B1 - LED monitor - 24" (23.8" viewable) - 1920 x 1080 Full HD (1080p) @ 120 Hz - IPS - 350 cd/m� - 1500:1 - 1 ms - HDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - black, matte

Philips
Philips Momentum 5000 27M1N5500ZA - LED monitor - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 144 Hz - Nano IPS - 350 cd/m� - 1000:1 - 1 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - speakers - textured black

Samsung
Samsung Odyssey OLED G6 S27FG602SU - G60SF Series - OLED monitor - gaming - 27" - 2560 x 1440 QHD @ 500 Hz - 300 cd/m� - 1000000:1 - DisplayHDR 500 True Black - 0.03 ms - 2xHDMI, DisplayPort - silver

LG Electronics
32" 4K UHD Smart Monitor with webOS & US