Skip to main content

Dell’s new gaming monitors offer something for everyone

Dell

Dell has announced a new line of affordable gaming displays, offering a variety of resolutions, refresh rates, and sizes to choose from.

In today’s monitor market, quality displays are somewhat hard to come by, which would have you think that manufacturers would come out with anything that sells. But Dell’s latest lineup doesn’t quite follow that pattern of thought. Rather, it offers an impressively well-thought-out new product stack.

Recommended Videos

Today’s drop includes the 25-inch S2522HG, the 27-inch S2722DGM, the 32-inch S3222DGM, and a 34-inch ultrawide called the S3422DWG. Let’s start off with a spec sheet:

Please enable Javascript to view this content
S2522HG S2722DGM S3222DGM S3422DWG
Size 24.5-inch 27-inch 31.5-inch 34-inch
Panel type IPS VA VA VA
Resolution 1920 x 1080 2560 x 1440 2560 x 1440 3440 x 1440
Refresh rate 240Hz 165Hz 165Hz 144Hz
Contrast ratio 1000:1 3000:1 3000:1 3000:1
Color coverage 99% sRGB 99% sRGB 99% sRGB 90% DCI-P3
Curve Flat 1500R 1800R 1800R
Adaptive sync G-Sync, FreeSync FreeSync FreeSync FreeSync

As you can tell, the displays are all a bit different from one another, with just the 27-inch and 32-inch sharing similar spec sheets. They’re both 1440p curved displays with a 165Hz refresh rate, though the 27-inch model has a more aggressive curve.

The smallest of the bunch, the 25-inch panel, is an ultrafast 240Hz IPS display with a resolution of “only” 1,920 x 1,080 pixels. That should make it excellent for highly competitive gameplay (though not quite as fast as something like the Asus PG259QNR, which runs at a mighty 360Hz).

But it’s not big, measuring just 24.5 inches diagonally, and the low-ish resolution may leave you wanting more when it comes to slower, immersion-based titles. It’s great if you’re after competitive performance but less so if you’re an all-round gamer.

Meanwhile, the S2722DGM and S3222DGM both feature VA panels for producing luscious, inky deep blacks while packing a higher resolution of 2,560 x 1,440 pixels. The panels run at a maximum refresh rate of 165Hz, which is plenty for the vast majority of us gamers, and you get a choice: For sharpness, pick the 27-inch variant; for more immersion, pick the 32-inch panel.

That said, the star of the show might be the S3422DWG, as it features an ultrawide design with a 21:9 aspect ratio and a 3,440 x 1,440 resolution. Sure, its refresh rate might be down to 144Hz, but that’s still plenty fast for most of us.

The ultrawide format, at least in my book, gives you an excellent level of immersion while featuring the same DPI, and thus sharpness, of the 27-inch panel. With the added width, that can often give you a gameplay advantage with a wider field of view, allowing you to see around corners at the edge of your screen better or just get more into your peripheral vision.

The curved VA monitors only include AMD FreeSync support, while the 25-inch flat panel supports G-Sync as well.

The monitors also include built-in USB hubs and Dell’s “downlight” feature, which is essentially a small light at the bottom of the monitor for illuminating an area of your desk. They’re also neutrally-styled and feature stands with the full range of adjustments.

No pricing has been announced for any of the four panels yet, but given that they don’t break any technical frontiers, I would expect budget-friendly pricing. Do keep in mind that Dell often offers better warranties on its panels, so they will come in at a slight premium compared to the budget options with similar specs.

U.S. availability is slated for May 27 on the 25-inch and 34-inch displays, with the midtier 27-inch and 32-inch panels landing June 22.

Niels Broekhuijsen
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Having failed to grow up, Niels never quit his gaming hobby and decided to turn it into his work as a freelance technology…
Acer unveils its insanely sharp 5K gaming monitor
Predator 5K monitor

We're finally moving beyond 4K. LG announced its OLED 5K monitor ahead of CES 2025 last week, and now Acer has unveiled its own 5K monitor -- with two major differences.

First, unlike the LG monitor, Acer's is IPS instead of OLED. That's a bummer on one hand, especially since OLED is being adopted at such a dramatic pace.

Read more
I broke HyperX’s new gaming mouse — on purpose
The HyperX Saga Pro with its components taken apart.

I've already gotten my hands on a lot of new tech at CES 2025, and I'm always careful. You never want to break a precious prototype that needs to be handled by hundreds of hands during the course of the week. So, you can imagine my surprise when HyperX put a broken gaming mouse into my hands and told me that it was broken on purpose -- in fact, it was designed that way.

Of course, the HyperX Pulsefire Saga and Saga Pro aren't broken -- though, I understand if the image above gives you pause. This is HyperX's bid at a customizable gaming mouse, providing you a solid foundation to build off of with your own buttons and heel. This is far from the first customizable gaming mouse, but it might be the first one that actually catches on.

Read more
MSI just embarrassed everyone with its new $80 keyboard
The MSI Forge GK600 keyboard.

"Let's move onto the peripherals." It's a sentence I always dread hearing during a CES booth tour, especially among mainstream brands like MSI. I know I'm in for a slew of keyboards that don't come close to the best gaming keyboards, and they usually come at an ungodly price. But MSI left me gobsmacked at CES 2025 with its new $80 mechanical keyboard.

It's called the Forge GK600 TKL Wireless, and it puts just about every gaming keyboard I've seen to shame. Not only is it packed with premium design elements usually reserved for expensive keyboards like the ROG Azoth and GMMK 3 -- it also comes in at that insane $80 price. Even as I'm writing this article, I'm still shocked at the price. The Forge GK600 has no business being as inexpensive as it is.

Read more