It is nice to have calibration handled for you with such a premium priced monitor. The next notable inclusion is the factory calibration report showing color gamut, gray-scale tracking, delta e, and gamma values. You can also turn the RGB off completely if you hate all things RGB. The lens plate snaps easily into place and the provided extra acrylic lenses allow you to choose whether or not you want the ROG logo shining on your desk, or plain RGB. The bottom of the support hosts an RGB LED projector that supports Aura Sync, allowing your other Asus RGB components to quickly and easily sync their colors up to the monitor. Mounting the stand to the support of the monitor couldn’t be easier, with only one thumb screw required to seat the stand onto the monitor. With the panel’s back stand leg up against my wall, the center of the front edge of the monitor sits ~10.5” off my wall. This effectively gives me about an extra 2” of desktop keyboard space on my desk. I would say the new PG35VQ stand is about 33% less bulky. This monitor is replacing my Asus ROG Swift PG349Q and one of my gripes with that monitor was how large the stand is. From top to bottom, left to right we have: the backplate cover, pouch for extra RGB lenses (with and without the ROG logo) with lens attachment plate, 5lb 280 watt power adapter, color calibration test report, ROG welcome card, 1x 6’ HDMI cable, 4x VESA mount screws, 1x 6’ upstream USB 3.0 cable, 1x 6’ displayport cable, ATX power cable, Warranty Booklet, Stand, quick-start pamphlet.
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