The Titan Army P2510G uses an IPS panel with LED backlighting, measuring 24.5″ with a 1920x1080 resolution and a pixel density of 89 ppi. It operates at a 180Hz refresh rate paired with a 1ms response time, and supports AMD FreeSync and VESA Adaptive Sync for variable refresh rate operation. Viewing angles reach 178° both horizontally and vertically, while the panel lacks anti-glare coating and is neither matte nor glossy in designation. The display does not support touch input.
Classified as a gaming monitor, the Titan Army P2510G measures 557mm wide, 330mm tall, and 58mm thick, with a total volume of 10660.98 cm³ and a weight of 3200g. The stand supports tilt adjustment and the monitor is compatible with VESA mounting, offering some flexibility in placement and setup. It does not include a swivel stand and cannot be rotated into portrait mode.
The display delivers a typical brightness of 350 nits alongside a 1000:1 contrast ratio, rendering up to 16 million colors. It covers 99% of the sRGB color gamut, making it well-suited for content that relies on accurate color representation within that color space. The monitor does not support hardware color calibration.
The Titan Army P2510G provides a focused set of video inputs, with one HDMI 2.0 port and one DisplayPort output handling display connectivity. A 3.5mm audio jack is also present for headset or speaker use. The monitor carries no USB ports, no USB Type-C, and lacks DVI, VGA, and mini DisplayPort connectors. Wireless options are absent as well, with no Wi-Fi, Ethernet, AirPlay, or Thunderbolt support.
The Titan Army P2510G draws 27W during normal operation and drops to just 0.5W in standby mode, reflecting a modest power footprint for a gaming monitor of its class.
The Titan Army P2510G is a display-focused monitor with no supplementary features built in. It does not include stereo speakers, and there is no support for Dolby Digital, Dolby Digital Plus, or DTS Surround audio formats. The monitor also lacks a front camera, ambient light sensor, remote control, Picture-in-Picture functionality, and built-in smart TV capabilities, keeping the feature set strictly oriented toward core display use.