
Sceptre C248W-1920RN
Score: 57/100
LG 32GS60QC-B
Score: 70/100Rankings

The LG 32GS60QC-B UltraGear is a 32-inch QHD VA gaming monitor featuring a 1000R curvature, 180 Hz refresh rate, 1 ms response time, and HDR10 support. It offers deep blacks and high contrast but suffers from VA-related ghosting, limited ergonomics, and modest HDR performance.

The Sceptre C248W-1920RN is a budget-oriented 24-inch curved VA monitor offering a modest 75 Hz refresh rate, basic connectivity and a tilt-only stand. It provides good contrast and eye-care features but lacks modern gaming amenities and ergonomic flexibility.
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
24 inches | 31.5 inchesbest | |
75 Hz | 180 Hzbest | |
1,920 pixels | 2,560 pixelsbest | |
1,080 pixels | 1,440 pixelsbest | |
| ↓ lower better | 8 ms | 1 msbest |
250 nits | 300 nitsbest | |
3,000best | 3,000best | |
— | 1best |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
Display(7) | ||
Screen Size (inches) | 24 inches | 31.5 inches |
Resolution (Horizontal) (pixels) | 1920 pixels | 2560 pixels |
Resolution (Vertical) (pixels) | 1080 pixels | 1440 pixels |
Refresh Rate (Hz) | 75 Hz | 180 Hz |
Response Time (ms) | 8 ms | 1 ms |
Brightness (nits) | 250 nits | 300 nits |
Color Gamut | 85% sRGB | 99% sRGB |
Connectivity(1) | ||
HDMI Ports | 1 | 2 |
Audio(1) | ||
Built‑in Speakers | true | false |


Products in the top-left offer the best value (high score, low price).

Professional reviewers view the C248W-1920RN as a functional but underwhelming budget option, commending its contrast, flicker-free panel and thin bezels while criticizing the absence of Adaptive-Sync, limited ports and lack of ergonomic flexibility.
Everyday users appreciate the monitor's easy setup, sleek look and eye-friendly features, but repeatedly complain about washed-out colors, missing DisplayPort, weak built-in speakers and occasional missing accessories.

Professional reviewers acknowledge the monitor's strong contrast, immersive curvature, and high refresh rate, but criticize its VA-related motion handling, limited ergonomics, and only token HDR support.
Everyday users love the monitor's immersive curve, deep blacks, and gaming-specific features, but repeatedly complain about ghosting, VRR flicker, and the lack of height adjustment. HDR is generally considered disappointing.
“If you need a cheap, general purpose monitor, this is fine. If you're expecting to be impressed by the image quality, spend a few more bucks.”
