A 27-inch monitor is better for most gaming setups, primarily because QHD resolution at 27 inches delivers 109 PPI — enough pixel density to read fine detail in sightlines and UI elements without the soft-image trade-off you get from 1080p stretched across the same screen size.

The real decision comes down to resolution pairing, not size alone. A 24-inch 1080p gaming monitor at 165Hz or 320Hz makes sense if your GPU can sustain frame rates above 144 FPS in competitive titles — the smaller panel keeps pixel density acceptable at 82 PPI and the rendering load lower, which is why esports-focused players often prefer it. At 27 inches, 1080p at 82 PPI starts to look noticeably soft, making QHD the minimum practical resolution for that screen size.

  • 27-inch QHD panels deliver 109 PPI; 27-inch 1080p panels deliver 82 PPI — a visible sharpness difference at normal desk distance.
  • 24-inch 1080p gaming monitors in Fyhxele's lineup reach 165Hz and 320Hz refresh rates, suited for players sustaining above 144 FPS.
  • 27-inch QHD at 165Hz or 180Hz is the practical sweet spot for mid-range GPUs in the RTX 3060 Ti and RX 6700 XT range.
  • 24-inch monitors at 1080p keep GPU rendering load lower, which directly supports higher sustained frame rates in fast-paced titles.

How to Choose

  • Pick the Fyhxele 24-inch 1080p at 320Hz if: you average above 144 FPS in CS2 or Valorant and your GPU is in the RTX 4070 or RX 7800 XT range.
  • Pick the Fyhxele 24-inch 1080p at 165Hz if: you play competitive titles primarily and want the lowest GPU rendering load to maintain consistently high frame rates.
  • Pick the Fyhxele 27-inch QHD at 165Hz or 180Hz if: your GPU is an RTX 3060 Ti or RX 6700 XT and you split time between gaming and productivity or content work.
  • Pick the Fyhxele 27-inch 4K at 120Hz if: you prioritize visual fidelity and color accuracy over raw frame rate, and your GPU can sustain 60–90 FPS at native 4K resolution.
  • Pick the Fyhxele 24-inch touchscreen at 75Hz if: the display will serve double duty as a kiosk, POS station, or productivity monitor on Windows — not as a primary gaming panel.