Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expiredXianL4749 posted Mar 09, 2023 02:01 PM
expiredXianL4749 posted Mar 09, 2023 02:01 PM

24.5" Dell S2522HG 1080p 240Hz 1ms IPS FreeSync Monitor

+ Free Shipping

$150

$300

50% off
Dell Technologies
42 Comments 37,428 Views
Visit Retailer
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Update: This popular deal is still available.

Dell has 24.5" Dell S2522HG 1080p 240Hz 1ms IPS FreeSync Monitor for $149.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member XianL4749 for finding this deal.

Specs:
  • Resolution: 1920x1080
  • Refresh Rate: 240Hz
  • Response Time: 1ms
  • Panel Type: IPS
  • G-Sync and FreeSync Premium Support
  • Brightness: 400 cd/m²
  • Viewing Angles: 178° H / 178° V
  • VESA: 100mm x 100mm
    • Ports
      • 2x HDMI (ver 2.0)
      • 1x DisplayPort (ver 1.2)
      • 1x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5Gbps) upstream port (rear)
      • 2x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) downstream ports [Front bottom, one with BC1.2 charging capability at 2A (max)]
      • 2x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) downstream ports (rear)

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • About this product:
    • 3 Years Advanced Exchange Service
  • See forum thread for deal discussion.

Original Post

Written by XianL4749
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Update: This popular deal is still available.

Dell has 24.5" Dell S2522HG 1080p 240Hz 1ms IPS FreeSync Monitor for $149.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to community member XianL4749 for finding this deal.

Specs:
  • Resolution: 1920x1080
  • Refresh Rate: 240Hz
  • Response Time: 1ms
  • Panel Type: IPS
  • G-Sync and FreeSync Premium Support
  • Brightness: 400 cd/m²
  • Viewing Angles: 178° H / 178° V
  • VESA: 100mm x 100mm
    • Ports
      • 2x HDMI (ver 2.0)
      • 1x DisplayPort (ver 1.2)
      • 1x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5Gbps) upstream port (rear)
      • 2x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) downstream ports [Front bottom, one with BC1.2 charging capability at 2A (max)]
      • 2x SuperSpeed USB 3.2 Gen 1 (5 Gbps) downstream ports (rear)

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • About this deal:
  • About this product:
    • 3 Years Advanced Exchange Service
  • See forum thread for deal discussion.

Original Post

Written by XianL4749

Community Voting

Deal Score
+69
Good Deal
Visit Retailer

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

BeigeRoad455
659 Posts
1907 Reputation
I bought this monitor the last time it was $150 after extensive research. I'm rather happy with it overall, and consider it a fantastic value even though it has a few flaws, so I figured I'd share my thoughts. To start, here's a link to the most detailed spec sheet I've found: https://www.displayspecifications...l/a11526ff
First, in terms of value, there are no other 240hz or higher ips monitors of this size from reputable companies even close to this price. The fact it has no massively glaring issues as a 240hz monitor at $150 would be enough to recommend it even if its performance in various metrics (color, contrast, response time, etc.) were rather poor, however it actually performs quite well all around.
At 24.5 inches I consider this to be near ideal size for a 1080p pc monitor. This is somewhat subjective, but I personally consider anything below 24" as too small, while larger than 25", particularly 27" 1080p monitors, look too blurry and you can clearly see the individual pixels at a reasonable distance. I have had no issues with the pixel density or sharpness of the display, though that can be a matter of personal taste. It displays text fairly well with no glaring issues, though if you don't plan to game and only use your pc for productivity, you probably could get a similar experience from a $60 60hz office monitor on a good sale.
Continuing the theme of ergonomics, the stand that comes with this monitor is excellent, I've seen much more expensive monitors come with far worse. It is rather heavy and solidly constructed, and it allows the monitor to: be raised up and down, be swiveled left and right, be angled up and down, and be pivoted 90° to display in portrait mode. The monitor has a standard 100mm vesa mount, so if you wish to use your own stand or mount it to a wall you can easily do so.
I'll briefly touch on connectivity since the original post covers most of it, the hdmi 2.0 ports are sufficient for 240hz at 1080p, but if you want to use any form of vrr (variable refresh rate technology, such as gsync) over hdmi with a nvidia gpu it needs to be from the 16xx series or later. I've seen reviews indicating this monitor works with vrr from both the xbox and the playstation, though I have not tested this myself. Display port 1.2 is obviously more than sufficient for anything you might do at 1080p. The powered usb hub has worked without any issues, and is a nice addition. This monitor does not have any speakers, it only has audio pass-through, so don't try to set it as your sound device in windows and then wonder why you're not hearing anything. The monitor came with a power, hdmi, display port, and usb cable, all of which seemed to be of reasonable quality and worked without issue.
Moving on to the panel itself, there's lots to talk about. When using vrr the monitor can range from 48 to 240hz. The response times using dells grey to grey standard (whatever that is since companies are remarkably obtuse about giving any real data) are 1ms in "extreme" overdrive mode, 2ms in "super-fast" mode, and 4ms in "fast" mode. Unfortunately you only get those three options and can't fine tune it. Extreme overdrive mode is basically useless, it completely mangles the image quality of whatever is being displayed to a laughable degree. It only exists for dell to say the monitor has a 1ms response time, no one should ever actually use it. If you're willing to give up any semblance of image quality for a faster response time you should just get a tn monitor. Super-fast mode is usable, it produces rather sharp motion with barely any motion blur, but it suffers from fairly mild overdrive artifacts. I personally am very sensitive to overdrive artifacts, however I imagine most people would hardly notice them, and it strikes a reasonable balance between image quality and response time. Fast mode has slightly more motion blur than super-fast, but it has no overdrive artifacting of any kind, this is the mode the monitor is set to as default. Keep in mind, even with fast modes 4ms response time it can still change grey to grey at a higher rate than the 240hz refresh rate of the monitor, which is what's most important. This monitor does not support bfi (black frame insertion), but that can't be used with any form of vrr, plus it tanks the brightness of the monitor, so chances are you wouldn't want to use bfi anyways.
Moving on to image quality, this monitor has a 6bit panel with frc, making this monitor functionally have an 8bit bit depth. It covers 99% of the srgb color gamut and ~90% dci-p3. This is actually rather good for a gaming monitor and more than sufficient for gaming and content consumption, but if you plan to use this monitor for color sensitive productivity work such as photo or video editing it will likely prove insufficient. Out of the box, even after installing dells drivers and color profile, whites on this monitor have a slight yellowish tint, which I noticed immediately and has been pointed out by many other people. I just grabbed my near decade old colorimeter and adjusted the colors in matter of minutes, however if you don't have a colorimeter trying to adjust the colors by eye to remove that yellow tint might be challenging. Hopefully dell will release some type of update to address this, but until then I can only consider the factory default color settings as fairly poor. Once properly calibrated colors appear quite good, and I have no real complaints. The brightness and anti-glare coating are sufficient to use in a bright room without issue. This monitor is not hdr certified, however while there are several other 240hz+ monitors below $300 that are technically hdr certified, they lack the brightness, contrast, and color gamuts to actually display hdr in any meaningful way. At this price point the lack of hdr certification means pretty much nothing. As a side note, if you plan to connect this monitor over hdmi I recommend controlling this monitors color through your graphics cards control panel, since windows has a history of setting the color range to limited for monitors connected over hdmi.
With regards to static contrast, while the listed spec is 1000:1, some reviews of the panel indicate real world performance may be closer to 900:1. Low contrast is expected of an ips panel, and realistically speaking the difference between this monitor and a slightly better contrast ips panel would almost certainly be negligible to the average consumer. If you want better contrast you should not buy an ips monitor, but alternative panel technologies come with their own issues. Uniformity and ips glow are just about what you'd expect for a mid range monitor, at least on the unit I received, your particular unit may vary. The viewing angles are excellent, as expected from an ips monitor, so if you tend to look at your monitor from various angles for whatever reason it should serve you well.
Overall, if you are looking for a 1080p gaming monitor the s2522hg vastly outclasses any other monitor in its price range, and I highly recommend it. There are a couple other monitors that when on sale are in a similar price bracket, but they either use a different panel type such as va or tn with significant drawbacks, are a non-optimal size, and/or simply don't perform as well. At this price it's pretty much a no brainer, especially when you stack on a certain cashback site and whatever other offers may be available to you. If your primary use case for a monitor is productivity based rather than gaming you would likely be better served getting a 1440p or higher monitor with a lower refresh rate.
xnreyescj
8 Posts
10 Reputation
Here you go, hopefully give you an idea.

41 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Original Poster
Mar 09, 2023 03:49 PM
174 Posts
Joined Dec 2015
XianL4749
Original Poster
Mar 09, 2023 03:49 PM
174 Posts
Quote from bonereaversedge :
FRONT PAGE

Check your AMEX cards for 20%
R*kuten has 10%

I got about $30 Dell rewared this comes to me about $100

Thank You OP
Slick deal for ~$100 for this 240hz monitor!!!
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 05:29 PM
237 Posts
Joined Jul 2020
bonereaversedge
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 05:29 PM
237 Posts
Quote from JollyMoon410 :
What $30 dell rewards?
from previous Dell purchases
1
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 05:53 PM
659 Posts
Joined Nov 2021
BeigeRoad455
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 05:53 PM
659 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank BeigeRoad455

I bought this monitor the last time it was $150 after extensive research. I'm rather happy with it overall, and consider it a fantastic value even though it has a few flaws, so I figured I'd share my thoughts. To start, here's a link to the most detailed spec sheet I've found: https://www.displayspecifications...l/a11526ff
First, in terms of value, there are no other 240hz or higher ips monitors of this size from reputable companies even close to this price. The fact it has no massively glaring issues as a 240hz monitor at $150 would be enough to recommend it even if its performance in various metrics (color, contrast, response time, etc.) were rather poor, however it actually performs quite well all around.
At 24.5 inches I consider this to be near ideal size for a 1080p pc monitor. This is somewhat subjective, but I personally consider anything below 24" as too small, while larger than 25", particularly 27" 1080p monitors, look too blurry and you can clearly see the individual pixels at a reasonable distance. I have had no issues with the pixel density or sharpness of the display, though that can be a matter of personal taste. It displays text fairly well with no glaring issues, though if you don't plan to game and only use your pc for productivity, you probably could get a similar experience from a $60 60hz office monitor on a good sale.
Continuing the theme of ergonomics, the stand that comes with this monitor is excellent, I've seen much more expensive monitors come with far worse. It is rather heavy and solidly constructed, and it allows the monitor to: be raised up and down, be swiveled left and right, be angled up and down, and be pivoted 90° to display in portrait mode. The monitor has a standard 100mm vesa mount, so if you wish to use your own stand or mount it to a wall you can easily do so.
I'll briefly touch on connectivity since the original post covers most of it, the hdmi 2.0 ports are sufficient for 240hz at 1080p, but if you want to use any form of vrr (variable refresh rate technology, such as gsync) over hdmi with a nvidia gpu it needs to be from the 16xx series or later. I've seen reviews indicating this monitor works with vrr from both the xbox and the playstation, though I have not tested this myself. Display port 1.2 is obviously more than sufficient for anything you might do at 1080p. The powered usb hub has worked without any issues, and is a nice addition. This monitor does not have any speakers, it only has audio pass-through, so don't try to set it as your sound device in windows and then wonder why you're not hearing anything. The monitor came with a power, hdmi, display port, and usb cable, all of which seemed to be of reasonable quality and worked without issue.
Moving on to the panel itself, there's lots to talk about. When using vrr the monitor can range from 48 to 240hz. The response times using dells grey to grey standard (whatever that is since companies are remarkably obtuse about giving any real data) are 1ms in "extreme" overdrive mode, 2ms in "super-fast" mode, and 4ms in "fast" mode. Unfortunately you only get those three options and can't fine tune it. Extreme overdrive mode is basically useless, it completely mangles the image quality of whatever is being displayed to a laughable degree. It only exists for dell to say the monitor has a 1ms response time, no one should ever actually use it. If you're willing to give up any semblance of image quality for a faster response time you should just get a tn monitor. Super-fast mode is usable, it produces rather sharp motion with barely any motion blur, but it suffers from fairly mild overdrive artifacts. I personally am very sensitive to overdrive artifacts, however I imagine most people would hardly notice them, and it strikes a reasonable balance between image quality and response time. Fast mode has slightly more motion blur than super-fast, but it has no overdrive artifacting of any kind, this is the mode the monitor is set to as default. Keep in mind, even with fast modes 4ms response time it can still change grey to grey at a higher rate than the 240hz refresh rate of the monitor, which is what's most important. This monitor does not support bfi (black frame insertion), but that can't be used with any form of vrr, plus it tanks the brightness of the monitor, so chances are you wouldn't want to use bfi anyways.
Moving on to image quality, this monitor has a 6bit panel with frc, making this monitor functionally have an 8bit bit depth. It covers 99% of the srgb color gamut and ~90% dci-p3. This is actually rather good for a gaming monitor and more than sufficient for gaming and content consumption, but if you plan to use this monitor for color sensitive productivity work such as photo or video editing it will likely prove insufficient. Out of the box, even after installing dells drivers and color profile, whites on this monitor have a slight yellowish tint, which I noticed immediately and has been pointed out by many other people. I just grabbed my near decade old colorimeter and adjusted the colors in matter of minutes, however if you don't have a colorimeter trying to adjust the colors by eye to remove that yellow tint might be challenging. Hopefully dell will release some type of update to address this, but until then I can only consider the factory default color settings as fairly poor. Once properly calibrated colors appear quite good, and I have no real complaints. The brightness and anti-glare coating are sufficient to use in a bright room without issue. This monitor is not hdr certified, however while there are several other 240hz+ monitors below $300 that are technically hdr certified, they lack the brightness, contrast, and color gamuts to actually display hdr in any meaningful way. At this price point the lack of hdr certification means pretty much nothing. As a side note, if you plan to connect this monitor over hdmi I recommend controlling this monitors color through your graphics cards control panel, since windows has a history of setting the color range to limited for monitors connected over hdmi.
With regards to static contrast, while the listed spec is 1000:1, some reviews of the panel indicate real world performance may be closer to 900:1. Low contrast is expected of an ips panel, and realistically speaking the difference between this monitor and a slightly better contrast ips panel would almost certainly be negligible to the average consumer. If you want better contrast you should not buy an ips monitor, but alternative panel technologies come with their own issues. Uniformity and ips glow are just about what you'd expect for a mid range monitor, at least on the unit I received, your particular unit may vary. The viewing angles are excellent, as expected from an ips monitor, so if you tend to look at your monitor from various angles for whatever reason it should serve you well.
Overall, if you are looking for a 1080p gaming monitor the s2522hg vastly outclasses any other monitor in its price range, and I highly recommend it. There are a couple other monitors that when on sale are in a similar price bracket, but they either use a different panel type such as va or tn with significant drawbacks, are a non-optimal size, and/or simply don't perform as well. At this price it's pretty much a no brainer, especially when you stack on a certain cashback site and whatever other offers may be available to you. If your primary use case for a monitor is productivity based rather than gaming you would likely be better served getting a 1440p or higher monitor with a lower refresh rate.
Last edited by BeigeRoad455 March 9, 2023 at 12:56 PM.
9
2
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 07:29 PM
237 Posts
Joined Jul 2020
bonereaversedge
Pro
Mar 09, 2023 07:29 PM
237 Posts
Great Review Thank You Sir, Repped
1
Mar 09, 2023 10:36 PM
677 Posts
Joined May 2007
bk_InAZMar 09, 2023 10:36 PM
677 Posts
Does anyone have a photo of the back of this monitor they can post? In the alternative: Can someone say whether the VESA mounting holes are centered vertically? Or- how close to the top edge are the top holes and how close to the bottom edge are the bottom holes?
Mar 10, 2023 01:06 AM
440 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
zopiMar 10, 2023 01:06 AM
440 Posts
Wow. Thank you @BeigeRoad455

You are the sort of SDer that makes this website worthwhile. Repped.
1
Pro
Mar 10, 2023 01:47 AM
237 Posts
Joined Jul 2020
bonereaversedge
Pro
Mar 10, 2023 01:47 AM
237 Posts
Quote from zopi :
Wow. Thank you @BeigeRoad455

You are the sort of SDer that makes this website worthwhile. Repped.
yes, this man SlickDeals.. i repped him
2

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 10, 2023 03:33 AM
1,877 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
SysopMar 10, 2023 03:33 AM
1,877 Posts
I don't need a monitor but I do need this monitor.
Mar 10, 2023 03:42 AM
8 Posts
Joined Oct 2013
xnreyescjMar 10, 2023 03:42 AM
8 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank xnreyescj

Quote from bk_InAZ :
Does anyone have a photo of the back of this monitor they can post? In the alternative: Can someone say whether the VESA mounting holes are centered vertically? Or- how close to the top edge are the top holes and how close to the bottom edge are the bottom holes?
Here you go, hopefully give you an idea.
Last edited by xnreyescj March 9, 2023 at 08:43 PM.
3
Mar 10, 2023 04:40 AM
985 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
justwantmymoneyMar 10, 2023 04:40 AM
985 Posts
If you don't need a gaming monitor, 1080p monitors are going for $20-$40 used. Save the from being e-waste and save yourself some $
4
Mar 10, 2023 04:51 AM
2,299 Posts
Joined Apr 2019

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Mar 10, 2023 04:55 AM
11 Posts
Joined Sep 2022
SociableNose7865Mar 10, 2023 04:55 AM
11 Posts
mine Amex plati has dell spend $599 get $120 back.
Mar 10, 2023 07:20 AM
677 Posts
Joined May 2007
bk_InAZMar 10, 2023 07:20 AM
677 Posts
Quote from xnreyescj :
Here you go, hopefully give you an idea.
Thanks so much- not just an idea, but you showed the actual proportions. I placed a sheet of paper against my screen and marked the top and bottom and the centers of two screws on the same axis. The mount is a little too high for my needs. Too bad, sounds like quite a great deal.
Mar 10, 2023 07:49 AM
1,564 Posts
Joined May 2018

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Mar 10, 2023 08:58 AM
132 Posts
Joined Jul 2017
msmith777Mar 10, 2023 08:58 AM
132 Posts
I also bought this last time at this price. I can say I am happy with it and have no regrets. The first one I got was a little weird and Display Port would not work at first. Then nothing worked. I got a replacement with little hassle and they even shipped it before I shipped mine back. The unit works well and I love it for games. The colors are a little off at least with no adjustment. It make reds a little muted compared to my old Benq that had really nice color but 60hz. The bezel is really thin compared to my old monitor and the height adjustment is nice. 24.5 is a nice size for 1080p and the adjustments are better than most monitors. I recommend!

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals