If you think your game monitor is speedy, well, it can be. But as soon as cleverly and as juicy, how to look as a newly prohibited MPG 271QR QD-OLED X50? I doubt. 27-inch, 1440p, beauty QD, was today before my eyes at Computex 2025 and is quite specific-in this AI MSI care sensor for the place of monitoring Peek-A-Boo.
Let me explain. The CMOS sensor module sitting at the bottom of the display captures images of anyone who sits in front of the monitor every 0.2 seconds, and then filters this information through NPU (yes, it comes, it comes AI magic).
If you decide to get up and make a cup of coffee, the monitor can detect your absence, and then turn off and start the OLED care cycle to prevent burnout. You can sit in front of him before it ends and turns on without a complaint.
I was shown a brief monitor clip, which was properly for the human object, and then I turn off in confrontation through the dragon’s Pikusa, so at least it strives for stunning art. In practice, the monitor used in a live demo was a bit tardy to react – although a representative of the MSI told me that it would be much faster before reaching the shelves.
While expecting privacy problems, my MSI hosts willingly noticed that the AI Care sensor intercepts images to detect, but does not store them. Also, really. Otherwise, this particular monitor would have thousands of photos of my Haggard, arranged jet vision in the file and nobody deserves it.
The sensor can not only turn off the monitor, but can also activate adaptive dimming, which automatically adjusts the screen brightness when you look away to save power-and automatically adapt to the color temperature of the display to compensate for the level of ambient airy in the room.
I am not sure if I am completely sold at the thought of my monitoring with settings, powered by AI, or not-but if it works as well as MSI says, it can significantly extend the life of the monitors, and also make it look better for a long day.
All this is associated with MSI OLED Care 3.0, which also expands the maximum mandatory refreshing monitor OLED from 16 hours to 24. This should mean smaller breaks for those of you, annoyed by such things. I am not sure who leaves the OLED monitor for 16-24 hours straight to the beginning, but it certainly sounds like improvement.
Computex 2025
Catch up Computex 2025: Once again, we persecute the rooms of the largest Taiwanese technology program to see what Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Asus, Gigabyte, MSI and others have to offer.
Return to the specification. At a refresh rate of 500 Hz MPG 271QR QD-OLED X50 is quickly burning, and the resolution of 2560 x 1440 is well suitable for the 27-inch panel size. As you might expect from the monitor with these certificates, it is not cheap-899 USD, but precise-what puts it in the competition with slower, but still a great MSI MPG 321urx QD-OLED, which can often be found for more or less the same money.
This is a 32-inch 4K stung, so whether a huge refresh rate (and impressive party tricks) MPG 271QR QD-OLED X50 wins buyers over the fact that it turns out.
The same panel also appears (without AI Care sensor) in the form of 849 USD Mag 272QP Q-OLED X50, which sat slightly after a tiny part on the side in a very crowded room. It still looks like a great display, but everyone wanted to play with the version equipped with the sensor.
It seems to me that you do not see a monitor playing in Peek-A-Boo every day and for 50 USD I still think that a few can pay for modern ones.
Despite this, for years I faced many juicy shows, and these two certainly look like stunning panels in the body. MSI creates one of the best game monitors that we have tested so far, and I will want to check if any of these two have done you when we get them for review.