The AORUS Elite FM275K16P leads the new lineup
Gigabyte rolled out a fresh AORUS Elite gaming monitor lineup at Computex 2026, and the pitch is pretty simple: build displays that can flip between sharper picture quality and faster refresh rates, so different kinds of gamers all find something that fits. The lineup leans heavily on OLED, but the standout here isn't an OLED at all.
That honor goes to the AORUS Elite FM275K16P. It's a 27-inch panel built around 5K Mini LED, finished with a glossy surface and packing a 218 PPI pixel density. That kind of sharpness is unusual for a screen aimed squarely at gaming, where speed normally takes priority over raw detail. Gigabyte pairs that with 2,304-zone local dimming, which should tighten up contrast and give HDR content more room to shine.
Multi Mode lets one screen handle several jobs
The clever part of the FM275K16P is what Gigabyte calls Multi Mode. Instead of locking you into a single resolution-and-refresh combination, it lets you switch between three: 5K at 165Hz when you want maximum sharpness, 4K at 220Hz as a middle ground, and QHD at 330Hz when you'd rather have the fastest possible gameplay.
That flexibility is the whole point. Most high-resolution gaming monitors ask you to pick a lane and live with it. This one is built for the person who wants a single screen that can pull double duty — work during the day, streaming and movies in the evening, then competitive sessions when the refresh rate actually matters.
AI Super Resolution sharpens upscaled images
The FM275K16P also gets AI Super Resolution, a feature Gigabyte says is designed to clean up and sharpen upscaled images. Worth noting: it's exclusive to this model within the lineup, so it's one of the things that sets the 5K Mini LED flagship apart from its OLED siblings.
The OLED models are all about speed
The rest of the AORUS Elite family goes a different direction. These models use fourth-generation Tandem OLED panels with a RealBlack Glossy surface and HDR peak brightness reaching up to 1,500 nits. Where the FM275K16P chases detail, the OLED options are tuned for fast, responsive gameplay.
FO32U24GP: the 32-inch 4K flagship OLED
At the top of the OLED stack sits the AORUS Elite FO32U24GP, a 32-inch model that runs 4K at 240Hz and drops to 1080p at 480Hz when you want even more speed. It also carries DisplayPort 2.1 UHBR20, which opens up as much as 80Gbps of bandwidth — useful headroom for pushing those high-resolution, high-refresh combinations.
FO27Q28G and FO27Q54G: QHD speed for competitive play
If you want something smaller, the FO27Q28G is a 27-inch QHD OLED running at 280Hz. It's the more approachable option in the bunch.
Then there's the FO27Q54G, which is where Gigabyte is clearly going after serious esports players. It's a 27-inch QHD Tandem OLED that can hit 540Hz at QHD and 720Hz at 720p. That dual-mode setup means you can chase esports-grade speed without dropping down to a lower-quality panel to get there.
Where the FO27Q54G fits in the market
The FO27Q54G isn't operating in a vacuum. It lines up directly against the ASUS ROG Swift OLED PG27AQWP-W and AOC's Q27G4KDP, both of which are built around the same QHD 540Hz and 720p 720Hz dual-mode concept. So Gigabyte is stepping into a category that already has a couple of established names, with a monitor designed to match them on speed while keeping the panel quality high.
One thing to keep in mind across the entire lineup: Gigabyte hasn't confirmed pricing or exact release dates yet. So while the specs are on the table, the cost-and-availability side of the story is still a question mark.

