Tested the new monitors today, just hooked to laptop though... I hate them... they make my backgrounds show color banding, jaggies and artifacts.
... just kidding, I mean they really show up the compression, dithering etc of lower quality images, as a higher res display obviously would.
No real real complaints, to me they are VERY nice, but I don't do pro graphics work, I am happy that I will be able to use them for hours at a stretch.
Things that are better than expected... the stand looks flimsy, but it's made of an alloy, it's actually quite sturdy, looks like designer knew what he was doing engineering wise. Controls: I was seeing complaints they were in an awkward "reach around" position, maybe an earlier model, on mine they are right at the bottom right of the frame, clearly marked on front, with pips on the power button for identification and you can find/feel them very easily. The hookups are to the left, not very far behind the bezel, and you can do those by feel also... BUT.. this may be inconvenient if you want to double stack these vertically... yah, don't go planning your sub $1000 video wall with these yet, unless you're fine with only 2 high and invert the top row.
Things that are things, not sure they're good or bad really. I thought from other product detail pages (Place I bought just calls it a Sansui monitor, not a high tech place TBH) that I was getting a VGA port and a HDMI port, but nope, it's a DisplayPort and HDMI on this one. I am ambivalent about this, as I thought it unlikely I would be using these on machines that only only have analog VGA, and I am not ID ten Tee enough to get freaked out by needing to use an adapter if I really really want to. Sound: I didn't purchase these to listen to, they have "bare necessities" laptop quality speakers in. The sound volume is not very high with normal volumes maxed playing a blueray through the HDMI , quiet environment is fine, not gonna hear much if the neighbour mows the lawn. It's there. Build: they seem tightly put together, screens seem very slightly flexible, maybe enough to survive a knock where older methods would shatter, but I am not gonna "see where they break" so somewhere in the region of resilient, but not so heavily built it's own weight works against it, and not so hard as to be over fragile. "Frameless": not quite, there's about 2mm of plastic bezel and 4mm of panel edge, so as frameless as you get without paying horrendously through the nose for it, pretty respectable.
Visually, no complaints, I'd agree with others that said you get what you'd expect from midrange LG or Samsung, can't see flicker out of corner of my eye, dwell/motion-blur/frame lag isn't quite perceptible within the confines of the test hardware.
Untested, other screen modes than native, "game centering" feature, DisplayPort input, input switching, retro screen modes, etc and so forth, I suck at monitor reviews, this was really a quick checkout to make sure I didn't need to exchange them for non-functionality before store ran out. Manual with it was basic setup flyer and safety warnings, gotta pore over the one they've got on product page https://www.sansui-corp.com/eng/monitor/896.html
BitWrangler quick look verdict: 8/10
AI Sidekick verdict: 5 thumbs up.
Unicorn herding operations are proceeding, but all the totes of hens teeth and barrels of rocking horse poop give them plenty of hiding spots.