Introduction
Titan Army is a Chinese display brand that was first introduced to me as a supplier to various mainstream brands, such as Acer, HP, Gigabyte, LG, and Samsung. The company is now making a push on the US market with its own gaming monitors, and I was given an opportunity to check one out. The Titan Army P32A2S2 is a 32-inch monitor equipped with a Fast IPS panel that combines a 240 Hz refresh rate with a 2560x1440 screen resolution.
The idea is obvious: to offer a panel that's large and fast, but at the same time not exceptionally tasking on modern graphics cards. You don't need a bleeding edge machine to game at high framerates at 2560x1440, which makes the P32A2S2 a potentially interesting option for many gamers. As expected, the monitor is priced competitively too, coming in at $370. That makes it one of the most affordable 32-inch 240 Hz 1440p options right out of the gate. Let's see what we're dealing with here.
Specifications
Titan Army P32A2S2 |
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Screen Size | 31.5" |
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Curvature | No |
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Native Resolution | 2,560x1,440 (16:9), 93.24 PPI |
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Panel Technology | Fast IPS (8-bit) |
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Backlight | LED |
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Refresh Rate | 240 Hz (48-240 Hz VRR range) |
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Supported Adaptive Synchronization Technologies | AMD FreeSync (NVIDIA G-SYNC compatible) |
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Brightness | 350 cd/m² |
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Contrast | 1,000:1 (static) |
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Viewing Angles | 178° (horizontal) / 178° (vertical) |
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Response Time | 1 ms GtG |
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Adjustability | Tilt (-5 to +15°), swivel (±15°), height (95 mm) |
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Video Inputs | 2x DisplayPort 1.4, 2x HDMI 2.1 |
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USB Upstream Ports | No |
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USB Downstream Ports | No |
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Other Ports | 1x 3.5 mm audio output |
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Speakers | No |
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VESA Mounting | Supported (100x100) |
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Extras | Rear-facing lighting system, timer, virtual crosshairs, PiP/PbP |
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The Package
The Titan Army P32A2S2 is shipped in an inconspicuous cardboard box with only the brand name and a silhouette of the monitor on it. It's safe to assume that the box won't be displayed on store shelves but exclusively sold through online retailers, so what it looks like is fairly unimportant.
Inside the box, you'll find the panel, along with the base, stand, and screws needed to assemble them. There's also a DisplayPort cable and some paperwork. Everything mentioned is placed into plastic bags and protected with Styrofoam. The monitor was delivered to me in perfect condition, with no damage to the box or its any of its contents.