Titan Army P32A2S2 Review - Large Panel, Manageable Resolution 6

Titan Army P32A2S2 Review - Large Panel, Manageable Resolution

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Value and Conclusion

  • The Titan Army P32A2S2 is available online for $370. You can find it on Amazon and Best Buy. To knock a further $20 from its price on Amazon, use the TECH0801 promo code.
  • Excellent gaming performance (low input lag, sharp moving visuals, 240 Hz refresh rate)
  • Solid image quality after minor adjustments
  • Adjustable height
  • 1440p native resolution isn't too taxing on modern graphics cards, while still offering acceptable sharpness at 31.5 inches
  • Competitively priced
  • Some luminance and color uniformity issues
  • Sub-par factory image setup (easily fixable)
  • Annoying front-facing power LED
  • Cumbersome OSD
As far as I can tell, the Titan Army P32A2S2 is currently the most affordable 32-inch gaming monitor with a refresh rate of 240 Hz, and a 2560x1440 native resolution. The combination of these three technical specifications is what defines it. It makes it an ideal choice for gamers looking for a large screen size and high refresh rate, but without the challenges (and price) of a 4K resolution panel, which are more common on monitors of this size.

While not perfect, the Fast IPS panel holds up in what it was made for. Its wide color gamut makes colors look rich and punchy, and the brightness range, spanning up to 350 cd/m², makes it completely usable in various environments. Even the image sharpness holds up; you're getting roughly the same pixel density as you would with a standard 24-inch Full HD monitor. The picture isn't what I would call crispy, but it's not soft either. I'll use this opportunity to warn you about 32-inch Full HD gaming monitors, which might attract you with their price. Those have a terrible pixel density of 69.93 PPI, which is something you shouldn't expose your eyes to. The 2560x1440 resolution is just about as low as you can allow yourself go at this screen size.

In terms of its gaming performance, the Titan Army P32A2S2 delivers, especially in the context of its price. It has a low input lag, good perceived pixel response times, and displays no adaptive synchronization-related issues on either AMD or NVIDIA graphics cards. Titan Army threw all the standard gaming features into the mix, such as virtual crosshairs and timers, so if you care about those, the P32A2S2 won't leave you hanging. The company also made the monitor fully adjustable, which is an area where budget monitors usually disappoint. While you can't pivot the screen by 90°, everything else is possible, including height adjustment.

There are some annoyances when using the Titan Army P32A2S2 day-to-day - I'm primarily referring to the front-facing power LED, which can't be turned off - but otherwise it's a great value choice for gamers that are after a large gaming monitor with a manageable native resolution. And hey, you can always tape over the LED.
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Sep 14th, 2024 06:19 EDT change timezone

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