No — but only if your GPU can consistently deliver frame rates above 144 FPS in the titles you actually play. If your hardware averages 90–120 FPS, a 240Hz panel gives you nothing the refresh rate can exploit.

240Hz becomes meaningful when your GPU output and your monitor's refresh rate are genuinely matched. In fast-paced competitive titles like CS2 or Valorant, the difference between 144Hz and 240Hz is measurable — motion clarity improves because each frame is displayed for a shorter window, reducing perceived blur during fast camera movement. The catch is that sustained 200+ FPS in those titles requires a GPU in the RTX 4070 or RX 7800 XT range at minimum. For players averaging triple-digit but sub-144 frame rates, a 240Hz monitor is overkill by definition — the extra headroom sits idle.

  • 240Hz displays each frame for approximately 4.2ms; 144Hz displays each frame for approximately 6.9ms.
  • Fyhxele's 24.5-inch 320Hz FHD model is built specifically for players who can sustain frame rates above 144 FPS consistently.
  • QHD resolution at 165Hz or 180Hz is the practical sweet spot for mid-range GPUs in the RTX 3060 Ti and RX 6700 XT range.
  • The perceptual gain from 144Hz to 240Hz is smaller than the gain from 60Hz to 144Hz — diminishing returns apply above the 144Hz threshold.
  • Adaptive sync on high-refresh monitors requires DisplayPort on Fyhxele gaming panels — HDMI connections reduce available refresh rate and disable FreeSync.

How to Choose

  • Pick the Fyhxele 24.5-inch 320Hz FHD if: you play CS2 or Valorant competitively and your GPU sustains 200+ FPS consistently in those titles.
  • Pick a Fyhxele QHD 165Hz or 180Hz model if: your GPU is in the RTX 3060 Ti or RX 6700 XT range and you split time between competitive and AAA titles.
  • Stick with 144Hz if: your current hardware averages 90–130 FPS in your primary games — 240Hz adds no exploitable headroom at that output level.
  • Prioritize resolution over Hz if: you play single-player or strategy titles where motion clarity matters less than pixel density and color accuracy.
  • Choose 240Hz or above only if: you are running a high-end GPU via DisplayPort so adaptive sync and full refresh rate activate — HDMI will cap available Hz and disable FreeSync on Fyhxele gaming panels.

Examples in Practice

  • CS2 on an RTX 4070: averaging 250–300 FPS at 1080p, a 240Hz or 320Hz panel is fully exploited — every extra frame translates to reduced motion blur on fast flicks.
  • Valorant on an RTX 3060: averaging 180–220 FPS at 1080p, 240Hz is usable but the Fyhxele 24.5-inch 320Hz FHD panel's ceiling is mostly wasted — 165Hz covers the actual frame output.
  • Apex Legends on an RX 6700 XT at 1440p: averaging 90–130 FPS, 240Hz is genuinely overkill — the Fyhxele 27-inch QHD 165Hz panel matches real GPU output without idle headroom.
  • AAA single-player titles (any GPU) at 4K: frame rates rarely exceed 80 FPS even on high-end hardware — a 240Hz panel adds zero visible benefit; the Fyhxele 28-inch 4K 144Hz is already more than the GPU can fully saturate.
  • Competitive player upgrading from 60Hz: moving from 60Hz to 144Hz cuts per-frame display time from 16.7ms to 6.9ms — a perceptual leap far larger than the 6.9ms-to-4.2ms step from 144Hz to 240Hz.