This is what you get when you want sharper-than-1080p text without spending gaming-monitor money. It's 27 inches at 1440p, which means more screen real estate for spreadsheets and browser tabs than a typical laptop or cheaper monitor gives you. The picture refreshes 100 times per second instead of the standard 60, so scrolling feels noticeably smoother and casual games look a bit better — but it's not the buttery motion serious gamers expect.
The USB-C port is handy if you have a newer laptop: plug one cable in and the monitor gets picture and charges your laptop at the same time, though you'll need to check if the wattage matches your laptop's needs. Colors are decent out of the box, not factory-calibrated but fine for everyday use.
The HDR label is a box-ticker. It's called HDR but doesn't really pop the way good HDR screens do.