Photo overview
The screen is matte black, there is very little refraction, albeit the photo does show a tiny bit due to our all-white studio and lighting. Here you can see, you can drop the monitor downwards, then a handle becomes visible. Note that the ‘thing’ on the top of the monitor in the photo below is just that, a carrying handle at the top of the stand, not visible with the stand at maximum height. Adaptive SYNC is supported though AMD graphics cards and systems via FreeSync and compatible systems with Nvidia graphics cards via G-SYNC Compatible Mode. The monitor employs 1000:1 specified static contrast ratio and 170°/160° horizontal/vertical viewing angles. No HDR, 8-bit color is supported and you get 400 cd/m² typical maximum luminance.
You will spot two HDMI 2.0 inputs and a display port 1.4 connections. There is also an audio input and output in 3.5 mm format, and a USB 3.0 hub with two downstream ports, for example, to connect the keyboard and mouse.
No power brick is need, the power supply has been integrated. It sucks if it fails, but overall it is way handier.
And yes all the way at the bottom you will run into a small joystick. If you push it it will open up an OSD menu basically offering four main options and when accessing it, you can go deeper into the menu structure.