750 frames per second — a threshold that would have seemed absurd just years ago
At a trade fair booth in Hong Kong this week, a monitor was running at 750 frames per second. That number — 750Hz — is the headline figure HKC brought to the 2026 Hong Kong Trade Development Council Spring Electronics Fair, and it represents something worth pausing on: the refresh rate arms race in competitive gaming hardware has now crossed a threshold that would have seemed absurd to most consumers just a few years ago.
HKC, one of China's larger semiconductor display companies, used the fair to showcase its ANTGAMER sub-brand alongside Saroasis' mobile game Fate Trigger. The pairing was deliberate — the booth was organized around the idea of marrying hardware performance to actual game content, with interactive zones where visitors could test response speed and control precision firsthand. The theme the company chose, "Precision Performance, Trigger the Ultimate Experience," telegraphs exactly who they're selling to: competitive players for whom milliseconds are a meaningful unit of measurement.
The product that drew the most attention for raw specification was the ANT257PF, a full HD monitor capable of a 750Hz refresh rate. At that speed, the display is refreshing its image 750 times every second — a figure aimed squarely at the top tier of esports competition, where the difference between a 360Hz and a 500Hz panel has already become a serious conversation among professional players. The ANT257PF pushes well past both.
The flagship model, however, is the ANT275PQ MAX, which trades some of that refresh rate ceiling for a more balanced specification sheet. It runs at 540Hz, offers Quad HD resolution, hits 400 nits of brightness, and covers 99 percent of the DCI-P3 color gamut. For players who want both competitive speed and image quality that holds up in slower, more visually demanding titles, that combination is more practical than a 750Hz panel locked to full HD.
HKC also showed fourth-generation WOLED technology — what the company calls Tandem OLED — in the ANT275ZQE, alongside HMO-Fast IPS models in the ANT253PQ and ANT27DPQ. The breadth of panel types on display was itself a statement: QD-OLED with a 0.03 millisecond response time and up to 500Hz capability, MiniLED panels supporting both UHD at 160Hz and FHD at 320Hz in a dual-mode configuration, and high-performance LCD reaching 500Hz and 400 nits. The company is not betting on a single display technology winning the market — it is covering the field.
That strategy reflects where the premium gaming monitor segment currently sits. QD-OLED has become the prestige option for players who prioritize color accuracy and contrast. MiniLED offers a middle path — better local dimming than standard LCD, lower cost than OLED. High-refresh LCD remains the workhorse for pure competitive play where response time and frame rate matter more than picture quality. HKC is positioning itself to compete in all three lanes simultaneously.
The Fate Trigger partnership gave the booth a content dimension that pure hardware showcases often lack. Rather than simply displaying monitors on stands, the setup invited visitors to play, to feel the difference between panel technologies under actual gaming conditions. It is a familiar trade show tactic, but an effective one when the product's value proposition depends on tactile experience rather than spec sheets alone.
HKC is a Chinese company competing in a premium segment long dominated by established brands from Taiwan, South Korea, and Japan. The Spring Electronics Fair appearance, with its global media and partner audience, is part of a deliberate push to build international recognition for both the HKC and ANTGAMER names. The company's booth number is 1C-D02, and the fair runs through mid-April. Whether the 750Hz figure becomes a genuine competitive benchmark or remains a marketing ceiling for now, the direction of travel in gaming display hardware is clear enough.
Notable Quotes
The exhibition is built around precision control and ultra-fast response, presenting a full lineup of gaming displays aimed at smoother visuals and more accurate operation.— HKC / ANTGAMER company statement
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
750Hz — is that a real competitive advantage or is it mostly a number on a box?
At the highest levels of esports, it starts to matter. The argument is that even if the human eye can't consciously register each individual frame, smoother motion reduces perceived blur and gives players slightly more accurate visual information during fast movement.
But most players aren't professionals. Who actually buys a 750Hz monitor?
Serious amateurs who want the same gear as the pros, and venues — internet cafes, esports arenas — that need to signal they're running top-tier equipment. It's aspirational hardware as much as functional hardware.
Why pair a monitor brand with a mobile game at a trade fair?
Because the story they're telling isn't just about specifications. They want people to feel the difference, not just read about it. A game gives visitors a reason to sit down and actually use the display.
HKC is showing QD-OLED, MiniLED, and high-performance LCD all at once. Isn't that a lot of competing technologies under one roof?
It's a hedge. No single panel technology has won the premium gaming market outright. By covering all three, HKC avoids being caught on the wrong side of wherever the market lands.
What's the significance of the 0.03 millisecond response time on the QD-OLED panels?
It's essentially instantaneous for any practical purpose. The competitive value is in the refresh rate and input lag, not the pixel response at that level — but the number signals that the panel won't be the bottleneck.
Is HKC a well-known name outside China?
Not yet, which is part of why they're at this fair. The Spring Electronics Fair draws global media and buyers. ANTGAMER and HKC are trying to build the kind of international recognition that brands like ASUS ROG or LG have in the gaming display space.