This is the entry point for people who want smooth gaming without spending too much. It's 1080p on 24 inches, which means the picture isn't as sharp as bigger or higher-resolution screens, but the pixels are close enough together that text stays readable and games look clean.
The main selling point is 200Hz refresh — that's how many times per second the screen updates, and it's high enough to make fast shooters and racing games feel noticeably smoother than a regular 60Hz display. The response time keeps up, so moving objects won't leave blurry trails behind them.
The HDR label here doesn't mean much. You'll get a brighter picture in some games, but not the dramatic contrast jump real HDR delivers. Treat it as a regular bright screen and it does the job.
