ASUS ROG Strix 32-inch dual-mode OLED gaming monitor hits 30-day low at $699

Two monitors in one, priced like neither
The ASUS ROG Strix switches between 4K cinematic gaming and 330Hz competitive play in a single panel, now at its lowest price in 30 days.

In the ongoing human pursuit of tools that refuse to make us choose, a high-end gaming display has arrived at a price that invites reconsideration. The ASUS ROG Strix 32-inch OLED, a monitor engineered to serve both the patient storyteller and the reflex-driven competitor, has settled at $699 on Newegg — its lowest point in thirty days and roughly $300 beneath its usual ask. It is a moment where the gap between aspiration and accessibility narrows, if only briefly.

  • A monitor that normally demands close to $1,000 has dropped to $699, creating a narrow window for buyers who have been waiting on the margins.
  • The tension at the heart of this display is a real one: most gamers must sacrifice visual fidelity for speed, or speed for fidelity — this panel refuses that compromise by switching between 4K at 165Hz and FHD at 330Hz.
  • Concerns linger around the glossy finish, which can betray users in bright rooms, and enthusiasts chasing even higher refresh rates will find alternatives — at a steeper price.
  • At its current price, the monitor lands in a practical sweet spot: premium enough for creative professionals and cinematic gaming, accessible enough to avoid demanding an entire system overhaul to justify.

Newegg has dropped the ASUS ROG Strix 32-inch dual-mode OLED gaming monitor to $699 — a discount of more than $300 and the lowest price the display has reached in the past month.

The monitor's central appeal is its refusal to make a choice on your behalf. In 4K mode it runs at 165Hz, the kind of setup suited to story-driven games where visual fidelity is the point. Switch to FHD mode and the refresh rate climbs to 330Hz, territory built for competitive gaming where milliseconds carry real consequence. Most displays force a compromise between these two worlds; this one moves between them.

The panel is WOLED — a brighter variant of standard OLED that preserves the technology's signature deep blacks and infinite contrast. It's glossy rather than matte, which sharpens colors and edges but introduces reflections in well-lit spaces. Color accuracy reaches 99% DCI-P3 with a Delta E below 2, making it a credible tool for video editors and photographers, not just gamers.

ASUS has layered in features that reinforce the premium positioning: OLED Care Pro burn-in protection with a proximity sensor that triggers a screensaver when you step away, USB-C with 15W power delivery for charging devices directly from the display, and a three-month Adobe Creative Cloud subscription bundled with purchase.

The glossy finish remains the clearest trade-off — a matte OLED will serve better in bright environments. Higher-refresh dual-mode alternatives also exist, but they typically clear $1,000. At $699, this monitor occupies a rare middle ground, and for now, it's as affordable as it has been.

Newegg is running the ASUS ROG Strix 32-inch dual-mode OLED gaming monitor down to $699, a discount of just over $300 from its regular price. For anyone who has been watching this monitor's pricing over the past month, this marks its lowest point in that window.

What makes this particular display worth attention is its fundamental design: it's built to do two very different jobs in a single panel. Switch it to 4K mode and you get 165Hz refresh, the kind of setup that lets you sink into a story-driven AAA game with all the visual fidelity the developers intended. Flip it to FHD mode and the refresh rate jumps to 330Hz, a setting engineered for competitive gaming where every frame and every millisecond of response time matters. Most gamers have to choose between these two worlds. This monitor lets you live in both.

The panel itself is WOLED—a variant of OLED technology that runs slightly brighter than standard OLED while maintaining the same deep blacks and infinite contrast ratios the technology is known for. It's glossy rather than matte, which means it reflects light but also delivers punchier colors and sharper edges without the slight haze that anti-glare coatings can introduce. For someone gaming in a darker room, this is the right call. The monitor carries VESA DisplayHDR 400 True Black certification, and its color accuracy hits 99% DCI-P3 with a Delta E below 2—numbers that matter not just for gaming but for anyone doing video editing or photo work. This isn't a monitor that only gamers should consider.

Beyond the display itself, ASUS has loaded in features that justify the premium positioning. The OLED Care Pro system handles burn-in protection through multiple layers: a Neo Proximity Sensor watches for when you step away and automatically triggers a screensaver, and the monitor runs various background processes designed to keep the panel healthy over years of use. There's USB-C connectivity with 15W power delivery, a feature you mostly see on higher-end monitors, which means you can charge a phone or tablet directly from the display and eliminate one more cable from your desk. Anyone who buys one gets a three-month Adobe Creative Cloud subscription thrown in, a nice sweetener if you're thinking about dipping into content creation.

The main trade-off to consider is the glossy finish itself. If your gaming space gets a lot of natural light or you work during the day, a matte OLED might serve you better. There are also dual-mode monitors out there with higher refresh rates at both 4K and FHD—but those typically run well over $1,000. At $699, this ASUS sits in a sweet spot: premium enough to handle serious creative work and cinematic gaming, but priced low enough that it doesn't demand an entire system upgrade to justify the purchase. For the next month or so, this is as cheap as this particular monitor has been.

This monitor can be used for both 4K gaming at 165Hz and FHD gaming at 330Hz, which pretty much gives you two monitors in one.
— PC Guide review
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Inventor

Why does a monitor need two modes? Why not just pick one and optimize for it?

Model

Because the games people want to play have fundamentally different demands. A story-driven game like Baldur's Gate 3 or Final Fantasy XVI rewards you for seeing every detail at high resolution. A competitive shooter like Valorant or Counter-Strike rewards you for seeing motion as smoothly as possible. Most people can't afford two monitors, so this design lets one display serve both masters.

Inventor

And the OLED part—is that just marketing, or does it actually matter for gaming?

Model

It matters. OLED gives you perfect blacks because pixels can turn completely off. That means infinite contrast, which makes dark scenes in games look the way the developers intended. And the response time is genuinely fast, which helps with that 330Hz mode. The trade-off is burn-in risk, which is why ASUS built in all that protection software.

Inventor

The glossy screen seems like a problem. Doesn't that create glare?

Model

It does if you're in a bright room. But in a darker gaming space, glossy actually looks better than matte. Matte coatings scatter light to reduce glare, but they also scatter the light from the pixels themselves, which makes colors look slightly washed out. Glossy keeps the colors punchy. It's a choice, not a flaw.

Inventor

Is $699 actually a good price, or is this just marketing?

Model

It's genuinely low. These dual-mode OLED monitors typically sell for close to $1,000. A $300 discount is real money. That said, if you want even higher refresh rates at both resolutions, you'll spend more. This is the sweet spot for someone who wants versatility without spending four figures.

Inventor

Who is this monitor actually for?

Model

Gamers who play different genres and don't want to compromise on either. Also creative professionals—the color accuracy is good enough for video editing. And anyone who's tired of cable clutter, since the USB-C charging means one less power brick on the desk.

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