Summary
The Titan Army P2712V is a monitor that clearly defines its strengths in terms of practical benefits rather than marketing promises. The central feature is the dual mode, which allows you to switch between UHD with 160 Hertz and Full HD with 320 Hertz. This is where the real added value lies, as the monitor meets the need for both high resolution and maximum speed.
The workmanship is on a par with what you would expect at this price. Lots of plastic, neatly assembled, functional, but without any pretensions to luxury. The ergonomics are practical, height adjustment and pivot are available, only the lack of swivel and the somewhat light stand are reminders of where savings were made. The IPS panel provides a good basis with a high pixel density, decent brightness and very good viewing angles. The contrast remains typical of IPS and surprises neither positively nor negatively.

The decisive factor for a gaming monitor is the motion display and the P2712V delivers here. With the right overdrive setting, specifically level 2, the monitor works reliably in both modes and without any annoying side effects. This is not a matter of course and ensures that you don’t have to constantly readjust. The latencies are low, VRR works as expected and in practice the monitor feels fast and direct in both UHD and Full HD.
The color reproduction shows a familiar picture. The monitor is not properly calibrated as delivered, but a decent color accuracy can be achieved with Windows ACM or the internal color space profiles. There are limitations in the blue spectrum, which is measurable, but hardly bothersome for everyday gaming and multimedia. The monitor is not intended for seriously color-critical work, but it is sufficient for occasional image editing. HDR is formally available, but technically not to be taken seriously.
Conclusion
In the end, it’s the overall package that counts and this is where the Titan Army P2712V scores with an unusually flexible usage concept, good gaming performance and a price that is significantly lower than what established manufacturers are asking for comparable ideas. If you know exactly what you need and have no false expectations of HDR or high-end processing, you get an amazing amount of monitor for your money.
The Titan Army P2712V is currently available from just 240 euros and it is precisely at this point that the evaluation clearly tips in favor of the buyer, because for this price you get a technically clean dual-mode monitor with convincing gaming performance that has hardly any direct competition in its class and is therefore a clear price-performance recommendation.

Now one more point that is particularly important to me so that you can classify this monitor correctly. In UHD, the image on the panel is visibly razor-sharp and very clean thanks to the high pixel density. However, if you switch to Full HD, the sharpness of the text immediately decreases and fine structures appear much coarser. However, this difference is hardly noticeable when gaming or watching movies, as movement and image content are in the foreground and the lower resolution is practically unobtrusive.
Anyone looking for the monitor will quickly find it on Amazon. However, if you look a little harder, you will also find it in online shops, and the name of this retailer is borrowed from the second largest planet in our solar system.
The monitor was provided to me by Titan Army without obligation – for testing purposes. There was no influence on the tests and results. There was also no compensation for expenses and no obligation to publish by Titan Army or anyone else.



































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