Content creation is about to change drastically in the coming years as ultra-high-definition displays with wide color gamut, superior refresh rates, and great contrasts become widely available and demand for high-quality visuals increases. Being one of the leading makers of professional monitors, ASUS cannot ignore the ongoing trends and develops professional displays for next-gen content creation workloads. At IFA today, the company announced its ProArt PA32UCG LCD, one of the most advanced professional monitors introduced to date.


To meet above mentioned requirements for next-generation displays, ASUS (and other makers of monitors) has  to use either bright OLED panels with all their pros and cons, or advanced IPS LCD panels featuring full-area local area dimming (FALD) backlighting enhanced with quantum dots (or other methods) for more accurate colors. With its ‘portable’ ProArt PQ22UC, the company decided to go OLED, but with the new ProArt PA32UCG (and similarly-sized LCDs for color-critical workloads), the company prefers IPS panels featuring the said treatments.

Aimed primarily at game developers, the ProArt PA32UCG features a 10-bit IPS panel of 3840×2160 resolution that offers a variable refresh rate (VRR) between 48 Hz and 120 Hz and is equipped with a Mini LED-based backlighting featuring 1,152 individual local dimming zones and quantum dots. That backlighting enables 1000 nits sustained brightness, up to 1600 nits peak brightness in HDR mode (officially, the LCD carries VESA’s DisplayHDR 1400 badge though), and a very high contrast ratio.

The ASUS ProArt PA32UCG monitor can display 1.07 billion of colors and reproduce the sRGB, Adobe RGB, DCI-P3, and Rec. 2020 color spaces used for video post-production as well as graphics design nowadays, yet ASUS does not disclose anything about percentage of the coverage. Meanwhile, since the display will come factory calibrated with a Delta <1 accuracy, expect its color reproduction to be very precise. To ensure this when deployed, the display will come with a light-shielding hood.

Additionally, the LCD supports HDR10, Dolby Vision as well as hybrid log gamma (HLG) HDR formats, but there is no word about HDR10+ support. ASUS also does not reveal anything about internal 3D LUTs (look up tables) for HDR gradations, but only mentions multiple PQ curves to fit users’ needs. This is explainable though as the product is many months away from its commercial launch.

As for connectivity, ASUS so far has only confirmed Thunderbolt 3 support, but it is logical to expect DisplayPort 1.3/1.4 as well as HDMI 2.1 (since we have VRR here) connectors to be present as well.

The company demonstrated the ProArt PA32UCG monitor at its IFA 2019 event, so we know that the monitor works and probably is in its final stages of development.

Specifications of the ASUS ProArt Mini LED 4K 120 Hz Display
  ProArt PA32UCG
Panel 32" IPS
Native Resolution 3840 × 2160
Maximum Refresh Rate 48 - 120 Hz VRR
Response Time unknown
Brightness 1000 cd/m² (sustained)
1600 cd/m² (peak)
Contrast high
Viewing Angles 178°/178° horizontal/vertical
HDR HDR10, Dolby Visin, HLG
Backlighting Mini-LED-based 1152-zone FALD
Pixel Pitch 0.1845 mm²
Pixel Density 138 ppi
Display Colors 1.07 billion
Color Gamut Support DCI-P3
Adobe RGB
Rec. 2020
sRGB
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Stand Hight, Tilt, and Swivel adjustable
Inputs Thunderbolt 3
DisplayPort (?)
HDMI 2.0 (?)
USB Hub ?
Launch Date Q1 2020

ASUS intends to bring its ultimate ProArt PA32UCG to the market sometimes in the first quarter of 2020 if everything goes as planned. The company naturally does not talk about prices just yet.

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Source: ASUS

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  • jon pais - Saturday, November 9, 2019 - link

    So many ridiculous replies to this post! The UCX is already available and is one of the very best HDR monitors on the market. It is IN STOCK at B&H. No other monitor touches it at the price. I am pre-ordering one here in Vietnam for just $3,300, which is a steal, since I'm getting the unit with an X-Rite i1 Display Pro. No need for 120 hz refresh rate, since I edit video, I'm not a gamer. And anyone who references Bill Maher is not to be trusted, since he thinks Klobuchar is the best candidate for 2020. LOL
  • lilkwarrior - Monday, November 18, 2019 - link

    This monitor was optimized for interaction entertainment pros making the 120hz + VRR a necessity.

    HDMI 2.1 should be used to more accommodate such pros because major next gen consoles from Microsoft & Sony are confirmed so far to use HDMI 2.1 since they both target 4K@120hz
  • halcyon - Wednesday, December 18, 2019 - link

    The panel is already postponed to Q2/2020. I doubt we will see the monitor before Q3/2020 in retail in volume.
  • lilkwarrior - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    Link? Even so, that's not bad at all.

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