What a Budget 300Hz Gaming Monitor Brings to Esports
A budget 300Hz gaming monitor is an affordable high refresh rate display that pushes up to 300 frames per second at modest resolutions, giving competitive players smoother motion and lower perceived input lag than standard 144Hz or 165Hz screens while cutting costs with smaller 24.5‑inch panels and pared‑back feature sets. This class of monitor targets esports titles such as Counter-Strike 2, Valorant, and Overwatch where frame rate and clarity during fast flicks matter more than cinematic detail. Instead of 4K and wide color gamuts at large sizes, you get 1080p or 1440p on compact screens tuned for speed and clarity. Recent launches from TCL’s FFALCON and Lenovo’s Lecoo Bellator brands show how far prices have fallen, bringing 280Hz-native Fast IPS and IPS panels that can be overclocked to 300Hz into entry-level territory not long ago reserved for premium gear.
TCL FFALCON Q5AD YYDS: 300Hz 1080p for Under $90
TCL’s FFALCON Thunderobot Q5AD YYDS Edition pushes the idea of a 1080p gaming monitor under $100, launching at 599 yuan (about USD 88, approx. RM414). According to Gizmochina, “the Thunderobot Q5AD YYDS Edition is a 24.5‑inch 1080p display that hits a 300Hz refresh rate for an introductory price of 599 yuan (about $88, approx. RM414).” The Fast IPS panel from CSOT runs at 280Hz natively and can be overclocked to 300Hz over DisplayPort, with a quoted 1ms gray‑to‑gray response and MPRT‑Plus blur reduction. For a budget 300Hz gaming monitor, color credentials are strong: 10‑bit (8‑bit + FRC), 99% sRGB, 93% DCI‑P3, and factory calibration to Delta E < 2, plus HDR400 and 400‑nit peak brightness. You also get AMD FreeSync Premium, G‑Sync compatibility, and basic esports‑oriented extras like dark scene enhancement and a dynamic crosshair.
Lenovo Lecoo Bellator Zhan 25Q: 2K Resolution Meets 300Hz
Lenovo’s Lecoo Bellator Zhan 25Q raises the bar for an affordable high refresh rate display by combining 2560 × 1440 resolution with a 300Hz overclock. Priced in pre-sale at 899 yuan (USD 132, approx. RM621), it keeps the same 24.5‑inch size but jumps to a dense 119.89 PPI, giving sharper text and cleaner edges than 1080p at this size. The IPS panel runs at 280Hz natively, with 1ms gray‑to‑gray and 0.5ms MPRT, plus Variable Refresh Rate support for tear‑free gaming. Color specs include 99% sRGB and 95% DCI‑P3 with 10‑bit (8‑bit + FRC) color and HDR with 400‑nit peak brightness. Comfort and flexibility are stronger than TCL’s option: TÜV-certified hardware low blue light, a height‑adjustable stand with tilt and pivot, VESA mount support, dual HDMI 2.1 FRL ports at 48Gbps, DisplayPort 1.4, USB 2.0, and dual 3W speakers.
Fast IPS vs IPS: Speed, Color, and Trade-Offs
Both monitors focus on speed, but they highlight how panel choices shape the experience. TCL’s Q5AD YYDS relies on a Fast IPS gaming monitor panel from CSOT, tuned to keep a 1ms gray‑to‑gray response while still delivering 10‑bit color and wide sRGB and DCI‑P3 coverage. This gives it an edge over older TN esports panels that sacrifice color and viewing angles for speed. Lenovo’s Zhan 25Q uses a high-spec IPS panel instead of a labeled “Fast IPS,” but it still lists 1ms GTG and 0.5ms MPRT, plus similar 10‑bit color support and broad gamut coverage. In practice, both should provide clear motion at 300Hz, though aggressive overdrive can introduce inverse ghosting if settings are pushed too hard. Esports players gain responsive tracking and cleaner motion, while retaining color accuracy suitable for everyday media, content creation, or streaming between matches.
Which 300Hz Esports Gaming Monitor Deal Fits You?
Choosing between these esports gaming monitor deals comes down to budget, GPU power, and how much you value resolution and ergonomics. TCL’s Q5AD YYDS is the pure value pick: as a 1080p gaming monitor under $100, it is ideal if your system is tuned to push extremely high frame rates at 1080p and you care most about speed per dollar. The simpler stand and fewer ports are acceptable trade-offs for many competitive players who already use dedicated audio and fixed desk setups. Lenovo’s Zhan 25Q suits users who can drive 300fps at 1440p in lighter esports titles or who split time between competition and general PC use. Its sharper 2K image, adjustable stand, HDMI 2.1 FRL, and speakers make it a stronger all‑rounder, though you pay more for that flexibility and image clarity.
