Sony built this for people who play fast competitive games where every millisecond counts. The screen refreshes 240 times per second, which makes motion buttery-smooth in shooters and racing games — you'll notice the difference if you've been on a regular 60Hz or even 144Hz screen. Pixels respond in a millisecond, so moving objects stay sharp instead of leaving blurry trails.
The catch is resolution. At 27 inches, 1080p means you can see individual pixels if you sit close, and text looks a bit fuzzy compared to sharper 1440p screens. In the middle of a match you won't care, but browsing the web or working in spreadsheets feels noticeably less crisp. Think of this as a gaming-first screen that you tolerate for other tasks.
The HDR sticker doesn't mean much here — it's the fake kind that doesn't actually make bright things pop. Treat it like a regular bright screen and you won't be disappointed.