This monitor exists for one thing: giving competitive gamers every possible millisecond advantage. The screen updates 610 times per second, which is absurdly fast — more than ten times what a regular screen does. If you play games where spotting an enemy a split-second sooner matters, this is the tool.
The picture quality is basic. It's a 24-inch 1080p TN panel, which means colors look washed out compared to modern screens and the image shifts if you look at it from an angle. The HDR label doesn't mean much here — it's called HDR but doesn't really pop. None of that matters to the target buyer, who's optimizing for input lag and motion clarity in fast shooters, not movie nights.
This is specialized gear. If you're not playing games at a level where frame-by-frame precision matters, you're paying for speed you won't notice and getting a worse-looking picture than cheaper monitors.