Not badly priced if the panel quality is there, compared to the EIZO CS2731 and CS2740.
Still using a CX240 myself, which i bought back in 2013 because of zero IPS Glow and a 100% uniform image.
Some people need a 100% uniform screen, and not some cheap gamer garbage where a white image shows dark or yellow spots towards the edges.
Hate to disappoint, but even Ultrasharp isn't spared the post-pandemic QC of other brands. At one point I tried to get a U2717D, twice - both returned for horrid uniformity. Dell makes no guarantee as to uniformity on these panels, but they do have a relatively stringent dead pixel policy iirc (take note, MSI and Gigabyte).
I do have a U2515H across the pond though, and it is a flawless monitor. I have a S2721DGF now and it's good, gotten better with time - its uniformity issues are less to do with Dell and more inherent to the LG 27GL850 panel it's using.
That said, it doesn't change that Dell is head and shoulders above everyone else when it comes to warranty, support and return policy on its higher end monitors (Ultrasharp and higher end gaming monitors have the same premium warranty and returns). And in a panel market where you're more likely to repeatedly play the try-it-and-return-it lottery than get a good panel, that return policy is worth more than anything else. Normally only Amazon and brick-and-mortar stores are that generous.
To get guaranteed uniformity (or at least better, with software to mitigate it), you need to at least step up to a pro-line BenQ (SW270C, SW271) or high end Eizo. Think the top Asus ProArts too maybe. All of which are Adobe RGB panels, cost as much as a GPU, and aimed at pros with colour accuracy needs.
The Ultrasharps usually have actually good accuracy out of the box, and respond well to proper calibration as well.