I'm at my computer 12 hours a day with a mix of work (Powerpoint, Excel, Email), gaming, photo/video editing, and watching content - generally YouTube or movies. I had been looking for a monitor that can do it all: good resolution for work, decent refresh rate for gaming, color accuracy for photo/video work. An OLED was out of the question as menus and borders are almost always on-screen and I keep monitors for a long time and VAs lack accuracy and viewing angles so an IPS like this fit the bill. I was expecting to pay 800-1200 to get all of that and really rolled the dice on this INNOCN. While I've only had this monitor a few days it has been fantastic so far!It came color calibrated and it renders well compared to my LG 34" ultrawide. I had no problem turning on high refresh in Windows and in the monitor. While it advertises freesync premium it seems to work fine with G-Sync and I've had no issues in V Rising or Cyberpunk. I run my monitors pretty dim to reduce eye strain but at full brightness it's plenty bright for all but the brightest rooms.There are some down-sides. HDMI ports are only v1.4 so you're not going to get high refresh from them. If you're hooking this up to a PC, use displayport. Neither Xbox nor PS5 support widescreen gaming so you're already going to have to deal with black bars on the sides as well as 60hz refresh. The USB-C port supports power delivery which is nice but is still stuck at 60hz for video.Some folks highlight the pixel density as a negative given this monitor is the same resolution as the popular 34" 1440p ultrawides. If you're sitting close enough that you are peeping individual pixels then you are probably sitting too close to take advantage of a monitor this size without some neck strain - and likely also dealing with reflection and angular discoloration as well. If you compare to other common resolutions - the PPI is slightly higher than a 1080p 28" monitor (93 vs 78). It's about 10% lower than the 34" variant (93 vs 109). And it's almost the same PPI as the very popular 48" 4k LG C1 (93 vs 91) - and there are no complaints about PPI with that monitor because the expectation is that you are not sitting right on top of it. That said, if you don't have the desk space or mounting options to get the monitor 3' or so from your face then maybe consider a smaller ultrawide or traditional aspect 4k monitor.The menu is a bit dated. Luckily I don't have to deal with it much but if you are the type that are constantly switching things up then it could be a pain. I prefer the joystick on my LG and even that isn't great.It came with a heavy-duty stand with a steel base plate and very little branding or obnoxious logos or leds or what not. Just a simple 'INNOCN' in the middle of the bottom bezel. I installed it on my existing monitor arms using supplied standoffs for a VESA mount.I managed to get an exceptional deal on the monitor at $375. It's hard to imagine a better value monitor at this price. I'd expect to spend twice that to get a similar feature set and even that would likely be a smaller 34" ultrawide. At the $600 MSRP the value prop is reduced and it may be worth looking at more popular brands just for their track record.Assuming this monitor doesn't prematurely crap out on me it may be the best value-for-dollar purchase I've made for this build.In the images, the left monitor is the INNOCN, bottom right is an LG 34UM88C, and above it is a 23" 1080p HP E232.