Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. Gaming
  4. News

PlayStation brings PS5 to your desk with its first 27-inch monitor

A purpose-built display designed around PS5 features and a tidy desktop.

Add as a preferred source on Google
The PlayStation monitor
Sony

What’s happened? Sony revealed a 27-inch PlayStation gaming monitor built for desktop use with PS5. It’s an early look, with specs outlined, a 2026 launch window for the US and Japan, and no price yet.

  • According to the PlayStation Blog, the display targets a PS5-at-a-desk setup and is planned for 2026 in the US and Japan.
  • It supports up to 120 Hz on PS5 and PS5 Pro, up to 240 Hz on compatible PC and Mac, and includes VRR and HDR tone mapping.
  • A compact stand and a built-in DualSense charging hook are meant to keep the surface clean and the controller close.

This is important because: Sony is pulling the console experience onto the desk. A dedicated monitor signals a real desktop strategy, not just “use any PC screen,” and that shift changes how people play and where the console lives.

  • It marries console features with on-desk ergonomics, so you can keep settings simple without wrestling a living room TV.
  • One screen that can stretch to 240 Hz on PC or Mac means fewer compromises if you split time between work and games.
Recommended Videos

Why should I care? If you play at a desk, this is the first monitor built specifically for that use case. It blends console-first setup with a small footprint, so you don’t need a TV and a generic PC panel.

  • You get console-friendly perks like VRR and HDR tone mapping in a 27-inch package that works in small apartments or shared rooms.
  • The tidy stand and controller hanger make quick sessions easier and keep the rig looking put together.
  • With a 2026 window, you can watch for price and full specs before committing, or plan the upgrade around your accessory cycle.
  • Compare the specs to the best monitors out now to see if you want to get it.

Okay, so what’s next? Watch for the full spec sheet and price, then size it up against current PS5-ready monitors. If you’re building a desk rig now, there are plenty of solid stopgaps and accessories to hold you over.

  • Shortlist today’s PS5-friendly 27-inch displays to benchmark features and costs before Sony’s unit lands.
  • If you also use a PC, compare refresh ceilings and HDR performance so one screen can cover both jobs.
  • Consider peripherals like a charging station or a headset to round out a console-first desk.
  • Quick spec snapshot: 27-inch panel, PS5 up to 120 Hz, PC up to 240 Hz, VRR, HDR tone mapping, compact stand, DualSense charging hook.
Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Spotify’s new conversational AI can play tracks you request and answer your music questions
A ChatGPT-like AI feature is coming to Spotify for music requests and listening-history questions
spotify

Spotify is rolling out a new AI-powered conversational feature that lets Premium users talk directly to the app about what they want to hear. Users can type or speak a request and refine the results through follow-up questions instead of manually searching for a song, podcast, or audiobook.

The feature is available from Spotify’s Home and Now Playing screens and works much like a personal audio assistant. It can choose what plays, answer questions about the current track or album, recommend something new, and look through your listening history to provide more personalized responses.

Read more
Baseus Inspire XC1 review: I tested these Bose-tuned earbuds, and now I’m an open-ear convert
If you're chasing the comfort of cuff-style open earbuds without sacrificing too much in terms of audio goodness, these Baseus earbuds are a budget nirvana.
Baseus Inspire XC1 earbuds in black.

See at Amazon

Quick Review

Read more
Your dead TV may be far less broken than it looks
A technician claims a minor backlight fault can trigger a complete shutdown, leaving owners with little indication that the television could still be repaired
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

A black screen usually feels like a verdict. At that point, replacing the television can seem more sensible than paying someone to investigate what went wrong.

However, a demonstration suggests that the underlying problem in some sets could be surprisingly small. UK repair technician Allen Fleckney, who runs the YouTube channel TV Repair Community, claims one faulty light in an LCD backlight can leave the entire screen unusable.

Read more