If you prioritize a premium gaming experience with exceptional contrast and responsiveness, and you are focused on competitive gaming or want the immersion of a widescreen display, the Asus PG34WCDM, despite its higher price, would be a suitable choice. However, for more general productivity tasks, the Gigabyte M28U with its higher resolution may be more appealing, offering good image clarity and text quality, which is beneficial for day-to-day use and casual gaming at a lower cost. Neither is ideal for HDR video editing, but the Asus provides a better HDR gaming experience. If budget is a concern and you want a versatile monitor that balances work and play, the Gigabyte M28U would be a wise selection. Give Feedback
this description is based on the product variant with some specs and product variant with some specs. At the time of writing, the variant with some specs cost some dollars and the variant with some specs cost some dollars.
Advantages of the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED)
Best in class for casual gaming
Good for media consumption
Very good refresh rate
Best in class contrast
Best in class response time
Advantages of the Gigabyte M28U (IPS)
Very good for productivity
Good text clarity
Key differences
Casual Gaming
9.5/10
6.1/10
3440 x 1440
RESOLUTION
3840 x 2160
240Hz
REFRESH RATE
144Hz
Inf:1
NATIVE CONTRAST
1228:1
238 nits
SDR PEAK BRIGHTNESS
312 nits
716 nits
HDR PEAK BRIGHTNESS
495 nits
96.6 %
DCI-P3 COLOR GAMUT
65.0 %
Matte
COATING
Matte
The Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) is best in class for casual gaming, while the Gigabyte M28U (IPS) is only fair.
Productivity
5.7/10
8.8/10
3440 x 1440
RESOLUTION
3840 x 2160
109 PPI
PIXELS PER INCH
160 PPI
Yes
ADJUSTABLE STAND
Yes
Matte
COATING
Matte
The Gigabyte M28U (IPS) is very good for productivity, while the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) is poor.
Media Consumption
7.5/10
6.7/10
3440 x 1440
RESOLUTION
3840 x 2160
Inf:1
NATIVE CONTRAST
1228:1
238 nits
SDR PEAK BRIGHTNESS
312 nits
716 nits
HDR PEAK BRIGHTNESS
495 nits
Matte
COATING
Matte
The Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) is good for media consumption, while the Gigabyte M28U (IPS) is only fair.
Cost
$1,300
$470
$0
$500
$1,000
$1,500
$2,000
The Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) has a price of $1,300 and the Gigabyte M28U (IPS) costs $470.
HDR Gaming and Media Consumption
Yes
No
The Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) is suitable for HDR gaming and media consumption while the Gigabyte M28U (IPS) is not suitable for HDR gaming and media consumption.
Key similarities
Competitive Gaming
5.6/10
5.7/10
240Hz
REFRESH RATE
144Hz
1.1 ms
TOTAL RESPONSE TIME
7.7 ms
20 - 240 Hz
VARIABLE REFRESH RATE
20 - 144 Hz
Yes
STROBING / BFI
Yes
238 nits
SDR PEAK BRIGHTNESS
312 nits
The Gigabyte M28U (IPS) and Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) are both poor for competitive gaming.
Digital Photo Editing
Yes
Yes
Both the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) and Gigabyte M28U (IPS) are suitable for digital photo editing.
HDR Video Editing and Color Grading
No
No
Both the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) and Gigabyte M28U (IPS) are not suitable for HDR video editing and color grading.
Print Photo Editing
No
No
Both the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) and Gigabyte M28U (IPS) are not suitable for print photo editing.
Give feedback
We’re constantly working to improve.
How the Asus PG34WCDM (W-OLED) and the Gigabyte M28U (IPS) compare to other monitors
"Fundamentally the M28U is an impressive 4K monitor; between the resolution, refresh rate, and IPS panel, it's a great all-rounder for the step up to 4K. Even beyond PC gaming, the inclusion of a HDMI 2.1 port offers 120Hz gaming for consoles, so it's quite the multi-faceted package for its price. Gigabyte has made no major sacrifice to tick all the checkboxes with the M28U."
This information was produced and vetted by the PerfectRec monitors team. We are a product research and recommendation organization that meticulously reviews and evaluates the latest monitor information and makes it digestible for you.
By the numbers
210
Monitors evaluated
10,500
Monitors stats compiled
15
Proprietary Monitors ratings developed
117,500
Recommendations made
17,625
Consumer hours saved
About the monitor team
Joe Golden, Ph.D
CEO and Monitors Editor
Joe is an entrepreneur and lifelong electronics enthusiast with a Ph.D in Economics from the University of Michigan.
Jason Lew
Staff Expert & Software Engineer
Jason is a staff expert and software engineer that has been making laptop recommendations for 7 years and moderates one of the largest laptop subreddits.
Chandradeep Chowdhury
Staff Expert & Software Engineer
Chandradeep is a staff expert and software engineer and expert in televisions and monitors. He’s been making monitor recommendations for ten years.