Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.
I did a lot of reading on forums, so wanted to share my experience so far with the ASUS ProArt PA32QCV.

First, where I am coming from: I have been looking to upgrade from a 2017 27” iMac for a while, and while I thought about getting a 2020 iMac, I really was ready to make the switch to Apple Silicon. I did not want a smaller screen than the 27” or a resolution less than 5K retina as I do a lot of text work and like the sharpness and screen real estate. I purchased an M4 Pro Mac mini and debated between the 6k options and the Apple Studio Display.

My first attempt to get this monitor was an order directly with ASUS for $1399, which they cancelled shortly after I placed it. A few days later I saw BestBuy had it in stock for $100 less than ASUS, so I placed an order there instead. I picked it up a couple of days ago and have been using it for a few days now. The monitor was packaged well and easy to assemble without any tools needed. I have it connected to an M4 Pro Mac mini running macOS 26.0.1 via the included Thunderbolt 4 cable.

What I like:
After reading about backlight bleed and color inconsistencies on various displays, that was the first thing I checked after I plugged it in. After putting up some test images, it fortunately looks good to me and I don’t see any issues.

The matte display was a concern for me coming from the glossy iMac 27”, but it has not bothered me. I really like the screen real estate and it is very sharp from where I sit at a viewing distance of 25”. It’s easy to have two windows open side by side and not feel cramped at all. On the 5k iMac, it felt more cramped and couldn’t really get 2 windows side by side for my work. Colors don’t quite pop as much as on the glossy display, but the trade off works for me and I think I won’t notice after a few weeks.

Brightness is plenty for the room I have it in which has south windows but is shaded by trees. I am normally running it around 250 out of 400 max.

Sleeps and wakes correctly.

Feels like a good value for the cost of $1299. The construction is solid, and while it's plastic instead of aluminum, I am staring at the screen, not the back.

Love the screen real estate. Seriously, working with 6k is much better than 5k and physically it's only about 2.5" wider than the 27" iMac.

What I don’t like:
The base feels oversized and has unnecessary text on it. I get having the ASUS logo on the front, but I don’t need color claims, resolution, etc. The base was what my spouse noticed. “Why is the base so big?” was the first comment. I guess a plus here is that the Mac mini will fit completely on the monitor base.

I installed MonitorControl (version 4.3.3) to control volume and brightness from my Apple wired keyboard (plugged into the display), and while the volume works correctly, unfortunately the brightness control does not. It appears to think that the brightness scale is 0-100, while the monitor brightness scale in the ASUS Display Widget and on screen displays both go to a maximum of 400. This means if I forget and use the keyboard controls, then the display ends up rather dim (usually dropping to 100, when I want it about 240 in my room). Edit - As I noted below, I needed to use the advanced settings of MonitorControl and set the Brightness DDC max at 400.

ASUS Display Widget control software. It works but feels like a non-native application. It was a little disconcerting the first time that I changed display mode and the displayed image flipped upside down before flipping back. I should only need to do that once, but the annoyance with the brightness control means I need to go into the software or use the on-screen controls to reset the brightness above 100.

While I was not expecting much from the speakers, I can say they are definitely a downgrade from the 27” iMac that I was used to. I expected that going in, but was hoping they would be good enough for listening to music while working, etc. I will need to switch to headphones or get some better external speakers. They are very tinny, although better than the built in speaker on the Mac mini (that is not saying much).

It feels like I have written more about the negatives, but to me they are relatively small compared to what I like about this monitor. Overall, while it doesn’t have the seamless integration I was used to with the iMac, I have been enjoying the sheer size and resolution.
 
Last edited:
The matte display was a concern for me coming from the glossy iMac 27”, but it has not bothered me. I really like the screen real estate and it is very sharp from where I sit at a viewing distance of 25”. It’s easy to have two windows open side by side and not feel cramped at all. On the 5k iMac, it felt more cramped and couldn’t really get 2 windows side by side for my work.
This is exactly the reason I ordered a 32" 6K display (LG in my case). 27" 5K (or 4K, doesn't matter) just isn't physically wide enough.

Colors don’t quite pop as much as on the glossy display, but the trade off works for me and I think I won’t notice after a few weeks.
What colour profile are you using? Are you using their Mac specific profile, another included profile, or your own profile from your own calibration? What do they call their Mac specific profile BTW, and do they provide a description?

I installed MonitorControl (version 4.3.3) to control volume and brightness from my Apple wired keyboard (plugged into the display), and while the volume works correctly, unfortunately the brightness control does not. It appears to think that the brightness scale is 0-100, while the monitor brightness scale in the ASUS Display Widget and on screen displays both go to a maximum of 400. This means if I forget and use the keyboard controls, then the display ends up rather dim (usually dropping to 100, when I want it about 240 in my room).
Ouch, that's disappointing.

However, you may be able to adjust the DDC max setting in MonitorControl to something higher as a workaround for this. To access this, click on "Show Advanced Settings" in the Displays tab. I think the max value may be 255, but I don't use this myself though so you may want to read up on this first before fiddling with the settings.

 
  • Like
Reactions: guug
@guug “I installed MonitorControl (version 4.3.3) to control volume and brightness from my Apple wired keyboard,… and while the volume works correctly, unfortunately the brightness control does not. It appears to think that the brightness scale is 0-100, while the monitor brightness scale in the ASUS Display Widget and on screen displays both go to a maximum of 400.”

If you aren’t able to get the brightness you need using Monitor Control then give Better Display a try (also from GitHub).
It has a very fully featured tab for setting up every aspect of DDC/CI, so you can match the numbers that the monitor expects to the output of the Mac’s keyboard. It has an ‘auto-configure’ function to detect which settings are appropriate, and then it can be fine tuned. The free version will do.
 
Last edited:
Using the little joy stick on the bottom right of the Asus monitor - push the joy stick to turn on the options, select brightness via the button under the brightness symbol, then move the joystick up to select the higher brightness range or down to select a lower range of brightness.
 
@EugW Thank you! Using the advanced settings for MonitorControl and setting the DDC max to 400, I was able to get the keyboard brightness controls working properly.

Also for reference, I am using the M Model-P3 mode.
 
  • Like
Reactions: EugW and PaulD-UK
  • Like
Reactions: drrich2
My point exactly: I would also rather have a 4K glossy OLED than a 6K matte LCD.
You would have to not care at all about text clarity to prefer a 4k QD-OLED over 6k IPS. I tried going that route and didn't like it. I think most people considering the ASUS ProArt prioritize text clarity over OLED strengths.
 
  • Like
Reactions: drrich2

It's not a very technical review but whatever.

I like Asus' Mac specific setting. LG doesn't have that, and it's irritating. I did calibrate my own Mac Display P3 setting on the LG and it's actually saved as a hardware setting directly on the monitor, but people without a colorimeter wouldn't be able to do that.

Their Asus test unit had poor brightness uniformity, but I'm not surprised. I don't know what my LG's brightness uniformity is, but my guess it is isn't great either. However, in actual usage it looks fine.

Screenshot 2025-11-03 at 6.45.50 PM.png
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: drrich2
Picked up my Asus 32" 6K display 9 hours ago and was only able to use i for the past 3 hours.

The brown box it was sent in was rather small. I thought what I got was a mislabeled 27" 5K display. The display is rather lightweight. Easy to bring up stairs of a 2nd floor and assemble.

I really like the "Native" Present in the ASUS DisplayWidget Center. It allows for near macOS native colors. Sadly I had to install it. This is very Windows programs.

Just sucks I cannot control display brightness from the wireless Apple Keyboard I have. I have to use the ASUS OSD or the ASUS DispalyWidget Center to do it.

Another niggle is the long-ish start up time of the display as some reviews pointed.

Some friends had reservation about my moving from 27" 1440p to a 32" 6K. Many pointed out that I'd have to move my head physically and just not my eyes. Not the case given my focusing distance is 66cm per iPhone's Measure app.

Extra 5" of screen size is nice especially at 2x the ppi I've been used to from 2013-2025.

Sad that it's I/O does not have a built-in Gigabit or better Ethernet port. Really useful to have for MBA or MBP specific product.

Is it worth the <$1,170 + 12% VAT? Given the alternative of $5k + stand Apple 32" 6K display? This is 1/5th the price.

If you need the absolute 1% of performance then pay 5x more for an Apple Pro Display XDR.

I like the 3 year warranty!

Regrets? Wish I got this the day it became available and wish I secured my 2019 MBP 16" better inside its bag and not allow it to drop 1 foot down. A slight misaligned lid with a slight dents sucks.
 
Just sucks I cannot control display brightness from the wireless Apple Keyboard I have. I have to use the ASUS OSD or the ASUS DispalyWidget Center to do it.
If you install MonitorControl, that should work.


Another niggle is the long-ish start up time of the display as some reviews pointed.
My Huawei MateView also has a long startup time. It's a bit annoying but I got used to it pretty quickly.

Some friends had reservation about my moving from 27" 1440p to a 32" 6K. Many pointed out that I'd have to move my head physically and just not my eyes. Not the case given my focusing distance is 66cm per iPhone's Measure app.
Yes I find 32" to be a great size. I find 27" 16:9 just a touch too cramped in terms of physical width. The 32" 16:9 size provides a lot more horizontal breathing room, without having to resort to a larger ultrawide. Larger ultrawide monitors with this pixel density don't exist anyway.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bigglow
If you install MonitorControl, that should work.



My Huawei MateView also has a long startup time. It's a bit annoying but I got used to it pretty quickly.


Yes I find 32" to be a great size. I find 27" 16:9 just a touch too cramped in terms of physical width. The 32" 16:9 size provides a lot more horizontal breathing room, without having to resort to a larger ultrawide. Larger ultrawide monitors with this pixel density don't exist anyway.
Thanks for the tip but Asus claimed it in their website that the features MonitorControl has is already built-in the Asus program.

Surprising feature is that when I switch on the 32" 6K display using the ON toggle underneath display that the 2019 MBP 16" that is connected to it using the supplied TB4 cable from Asus cold boots up. There is another ON button at the front of the display that has a white LED glowing downward. Wish there was an option to turn down the brightness or turn it OFF entirely. Coming from a 2012 iMac 27" this is very not iMac-like.

When I turn OFF the the screen using the white LED light I can't figure out how to turn on the display again and make it power the MBP.

Just to add here is my cost break down analysis for anyone whining about the shortcomings of the Asus 32" 6K as if it were the ugly child. Prices below does not have sales tax, GST or VAT.

Apple's Pro Display XDR 32" 6K display price break down

- $6k Nano-texture glass (Matte display equivalent)
- $1k Pro Stand
- $200 VESA Mount Adapter
- $180 + $180 total of 3 years warranty
- 2x TB3 ports (One port @ 96W)
- 2x USB-C ports
- No USB-A
- No HDMI
- No DisplayPort
- $7560 total cost

Vs

Asus ProArt 32" 6K display's

- Matte display
- Stand
- VESA mount
- 3 years warranty
- 2x TB4 ports (One port @ 96W)
- 1x USB-C @ 2.5W (Useful to slow charge Apple Watch Series 10 with USB-C cable as I intend to keep it until Series 16)
- 2x USB-A @ 2.5W (slow charges iPhone 16 Pro Max for around 8 hours from 10-90%)
- 1x HDMI 2.1
- 1x DisplayPort 1.4


- $1170 total cost (I live outside the US)

I can buy nearly 6.5x Asus 32" 6K displays for every 1x Apple 32" 6K.

Is the "last 1%" and Apple industrial design of their products worth the 6.5x "Apple Tax"?

Screenshot 2025-11-06 at 8.37.32 AM.png
 
Last edited:
Thanks for the tip but Asus claimed it in their website that the features MonitorControl has is already built-in the Asus program.
With MonitorControl, you just use the Apple keyboard's brightness buttons. You shouldn't have to run the Asus software at all for that.

I can buy nearly 6.5x Asus 32" 6K displays for every 1x Apple 32" 6K.

Is the "last 1%" and Apple industrial design of their products worth the 6.5x "Apple Tax"?
I'm not sure you can compare things like that. Apple monitors are not perfect, but they tend to be built with significantly higher tolerances than Asus' monitors. Asus monitors do not have a great reputation for consistent quality. And even though Apple may use say LG panels (among others), and LG actually partnered with Apple for several years for consumer monitors, it seems Apple's monitors are still just better quality than LG's monitors on average. I suspect that's partially why Apple got back into the display business. LG couldn't be relied upon to supply as consistent an experience.

As for the Pro Display XDR, it is in a completely different class. It's a 1600 nit near-mini-LED monitor that consistently gets good ratings. Is it worth the cost? Probably not for most people, but if the monitor were priced at say "only" twice as much as the Asus, I'd buy it in a heartbeat, and I am not even a creative pro. ie. I'd rather buy a Pro Display XDR with stand for CA$4000 than an Asus 6K for CA$2000. However, I won't pay close to CA$7000 (which would be the price of the monitor with VESA mount, and a third party solid aluminum stand). I was so jealous of someone locally here who managed to snag a used one several years ago for half price. It was perfect, and even had over 2 years of AppleCare left on it.
 
Last edited:
With MonitorControl, you just use the Apple keyboard's brightness buttons. You shouldn't have to run the Asus software at all for that.
I had to run the Asus software specific to get the "Native" display preset. Colors now looks more aligned with 2019 MBP 16" and exceeds the 2012 iMac 27"
 
I had to run the Asus software specific to get the "Native" display preset. Colors now looks more aligned with 2019 MBP 16" and exceeds the 2012 iMac 27"
Yes but if the Mac-specific option is now loaded on the monitor as a hardware preset, then you don't need to run the Asus software anymore. I didn't think you had to always keep the Asus software loaded just to use the Mac-specific preset. If you did, that would be a big downer IMO.
 
Yes but if the Mac-specific option is now loaded on the monitor as a hardware preset, then you don't need to run the Asus software anymore. I didn't think you had to always keep the Asus software loaded just to use the Mac-specific preset. If you did, that would be a big downer IMO.
May I ask for a step-by-step hand-holding instructions on how to do this without the ASUS software?
 
May I ask for a step-by-step hand-holding instructions on how to do this without the ASUS software?
? Just install the MonitorControl app and you're done. (You might have to tell macOS to override the security to allow installation.)

Then you should be able to control the brightness with your keyboard buttons. The one caveat is that by default the brightness range is set to go from 0-100. Some monitors go from 0-255 or 0-400, so on those you would need to adjust the settings in the app under the advanced settings, but most monitors should be fine with 0-100.
 
? Just install the MonitorControl app and you're done. (You might have to tell macOS to override the security to allow installation.)

Then you should be able to control the brightness with your keyboard buttons. The one caveat is that by default the brightness range is set to go from 0-100. Some monitors go from 0-255 or 0-400, so on those you would need to adjust the settings in the app under the advanced settings, but most monitors should be fine with 0-100.
WhatI meant was how to I keep "Native" display preset.
 
Not 218 ppi so it isn't a Retina 8K Display.

How will macOS handle 275 ppi?

To get Retina 8K Display at 218 ppi will have the screen be 41".

A display that large with colors superior to any 2025 Apple device costing nearing $1k from ASUS will occur in a decade's time.
With this idiosyncratic interpretation, many iPhones and iPads are also not devices with Retina displays.
Anything above 218 PPI is, of course, also Retina.

But it should also be mentioned again: the world does not consist solely of Apple. When it comes to graphics, Apple has not been setting the tone for a long time.
 
With this idiosyncratic interpretation, many iPhones and iPads are also not devices with Retina displays.
Anything above 218 PPI is, of course, also Retina.

But it should also be mentioned again: the world does not consist solely of Apple. When it comes to graphics, Apple has not been setting the tone for a long time.
Dude, read the room... this is MR... my reply is relevant to the user group.
 
Dude, read the room... this is MR... my reply is relevant to the user group.
But you are aware that there are also some users here on MR who don't have much or anything to do with Apple, but because there is a common interest in high-resolution monitors here, it's the best place to discuss it.
 
Not 218 ppi so it isn't a Retina 8K Display.

How will macOS handle 275 ppi?
@Dark-Signature is correct that it still is a Retina display. However, for the time being, macOS may not handle that Retina display perfectly unless you're OK with tiny text.

Unlike iOS, macOS does not support 3X scaling, so the max integer scaling is 2X, which would be HiDPI 3840x2160 at 32". Most would prefer 3072x1728 or 3008x1692 at 31.5", but some people like 3360x1890. Not too many Mac users would like 3840x2160 at that screen size.

I'm curious though what HiDPI resolution options Apple will offer on that screen. Will they offer 2.5X scaling? That would be exactly 3072x1728. With a pixel density that high, text would still look excellent at 2.5X.
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: bigglow
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.