ProArt PA278QV

ASUS

ProArt PA278QV

75 positive 0 neutral 13 negative

Based on 88 Reddit mentions

$253.00

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Most discussed features

Sentiment summary across the product areas Reddit users mention most.

Reddit mentions

Original Reddit posts and comments behind this analysis.

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Did I take the wrong car??

If you do any kind of photo, video, or design work, the Studio Display is tough to beat in absolute terms. The ASUS ProArt is definitely far better value, but if you’ve got the budget for a Studio it’s an excellent product.

sloth-guts in r/Porsche

December 13, 2024 11:56 AM

115

1920 x 1080 or 2560 x 1440 screen resolution?

If you're doing photography, you should be on nothing less than 4K with an emphasis on color accuracy. You don't have to go crazy with a $5K pro display. There are Asus ProArt displays and similar for under $500 that would do the job just fine.

LukeLC in r/Monitors

April 6, 2026 6:08 PM

13

Non-Apple monitor suggestions?

An Asus ProArt PA279CRV. 99% P3, good stand, good ports, no external power supply, 3 year warranty (or if you get open box whatever is left after the original purchase). $400 on Amazon right now.

Jorgenreads in r/mac

November 22, 2025 2:15 AM

5

Monitor Mac Mini

I guarantee you are 1000% covered for photo editing in lightroom/photoshop with the base model if that was your concern. It edits 4k video flawlessly, so I think you'd have to be doing some really niche stuff to hit any walls. As for the monitor, I'm not sure about higher end models... but I did rea

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DeeplyUniqueUsername in r/macmini

November 27, 2025 8:35 AM

5

Buy Studio Display now or wait for the new one in 26?

I would wait. If you need a 27inch 5K now you could grab the ASUS Pro Art for $799. The screen is great even if the build quality is a little cheap. Then when the new Studio Display comes out sell the Asus for at least of what you paid for it or use it as a secondary display.

Eric6052 in r/mac

October 15, 2025 8:55 PM

9

DCI-P3, Adobe RGB, and sRGB Percentages? IPS and VA Monitors

So the percentage ranges show the amount of the certain color space that is covered and how they are tuned. You really want to be as close to 100% as possible, because that will be accurate. Under 100% content may look undersaturated and over 100% content may look oversaturated. If you are looking f

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GuntherOfGunth in r/Monitors

December 27, 2025 6:36 PM

4

Mini-LED vs OLED? ~$350 for Photo Editing / Media, No Gaming

If you need something for photo editing, which requires color accuracy, I would say look at the new ProArt PA278QV Gen2. It is 100% SRGB and 95% DCI-P3 with a ΔE < 2 and 120hz VRR, 1440p. All for 259$. But if you wanted to push the budget a bit there is the ProArt PA279CRV which is 4K and covers 99%

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GuntherOfGunth in r/Monitors

December 1, 2025 11:30 PM

4

14-inch Mac experience as editors?

you do NOT need 4k$ for something like this lol, something like a 300-400$ ASUS ProArt works perfectly fine, and has great color accuracy. Even apple's overpriced asf top-of-the-line studio xdr display starts at under 3000$ lol, 4k$ is insane

ser133 in r/davinciresolve

April 16, 2026 9:04 AM

3

For the PC Nikkis, what monitor do you use?

I use an ASUS ProArt Display PA278QV. It's about $180 USD right now on Amazon. I really like it so far. It has really good color and has pretty good refresh rate for a display that isn't for gaming specifically. The $180 one is WQHD (2560x1440), but they do have higher resolutions (at much higher pr

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kitastorm in r/InfinityNikki

November 26, 2025 2:09 AM

3

My journey for the $160 Steam Deck

it’s an ASUS ProArt Display PA278QV i got it for around 100 dollars when it was on sale a while back it’s honestly way better than the “gaming” monitor i have in the other side of my room

KannaKast in r/SteamDeck

January 10, 2026 3:42 PM

2

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