The result, according to LG, is faster visual confirmation of on‑screen events and the potential for quicker reactions—an advantage that matters most in fast-paced first‑person shooters.
LG designed the monitor specifically around competitive gaming requirements. Key hardware characteristics include:
The monitor also includes MBRR (Motion Blur Reduction) technology to keep fast‑moving objects sharper during rapid camera movements or high‑speed gameplay.
Beyond raw refresh rate, LG is integrating on‑device AI features intended to adapt the viewing and audio experience for different game scenarios.
Reported AI capabilities include:
These AI features run locally on the monitor rather than relying on external software, allowing real‑time adjustments without additional PC processing overhead.
The UltraGear 25G590B also includes several design details aimed at tournament environments and competitive setups:
These touches emphasize consistency and ergonomics—factors that matter in esports where players often replicate exact setups between training and tournaments.
LG announced the UltraGear 25G590B on May 19, 2026. The company says the monitor is expected to launch in the second half of 2026, initially in select markets before expanding globally.
Whether players can fully perceive the difference between extremely high refresh rates remains debated, but each step upward reduces the time between frame updates. For competitive players chasing the smallest possible latency advantage, even tiny improvements can matter.
By delivering 1000Hz refresh at standard Full HD resolution, LG is effectively pushing esports display technology into a new experimental territory—one that could influence the next generation of competitive gaming hardware if the benefits prove measurable in real-world play.
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