G-SYNC Pulsar In Action – AOC AG276QSG2
There Is A VESA Mount Behind That Asymmetrical Back
You can mount the AOC AG276QSG2 on a monitor arm, but the stand it comes with is capable of an impressive 130mm of height adjustment, 18.5 degrees of swivel in both directions, tilt from -3.5 to +18.5 degrees, and a full 90 degree pivot if you like portrait displays. On the other hand there’s no USB-C nor KVM functionality, although it does feature a number of older style USB ports in addition to the two HDMI ports and single DisplayPort 1.4.
The AOC AG276QSG2 is a G-SYNC Pulsar display, so you get up to a 360Hz refresh rate and 1 ms GtG response time on this 1440p 27″ display. KitGuru’s testing revealed an average 1.29ms of lag which translates to a half a frame at 360Hz, or you could just say it was very fast. Apart from the lack of decent HDR, KitGuru were more than impressed by NVIDIA’s new G-SYNC Pulsar technology, as you can see for yourself in the full review.
Today we're checking out the AOC Agon Pro AG276QSG2. The model number may not make it immediately obvious, but this is a rather exciting monitor for one main reason – it supports Nvidia's new G-Sync Pulsar backlight strobing technology that was officially launched at CES 202



In action? They didn’t even play a game on it in that review.