Xiaomi has put the Redmi G24Q on sale in China, and the pitch is simple: 2K resolution, a 180Hz refresh rate, and a 749 yuan price tag. At roughly $110, it lands in the part of the monitor market where spec sheets are getting louder while wallets are getting quieter.


Redmi G24Q display specs
The panel is a Fast IPS unit with a 2560 x 1440 resolution, a 178-degree viewing angle, and a narrow three-sided bezel design that should fit neatly into multi-monitor rigs. Xiaomi says it pairs the 180Hz refresh rate with a 1ms GTG response time, plus AMD FreeSync and Dynamic OD tuning to keep motion blur, tearing, and ghosting under control.
That puts the G24Q squarely in the sweet spot for competitive PC gaming, where 1440p has become the sensible middle ground between sheer frame rate and image sharpness. Rival brands have been crowding this tier for a while, so Xiaomi is leaning on price and extras rather than trying to invent a new category.
Gaming and eye-care features
Xiaomi has also stuffed in a few gamer-friendly flourishes: custom crosshair overlays, a dark scene enhancement mode, and a night vision mode for low-light play. It is the usual ”we know what streamers want” package, but at least the company is honest about who the target buyer is.
On the productivity side, the monitor is VESA DisplayHDR 400 certified, with up to 400 nits peak brightness, 94% DCI-P3 coverage, 100% sRGB coverage, 8-bit + FRC color, and a Delta E value of less than 2. Xiaomi also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified low blue light support, its QingShan eye protection system, and DC dimming to cut flicker during long sessions.
Ports, stand and mounting options
Connectivity is straightforward: two HDMI 2.0 ports and two DisplayPort 1.4 ports. The stand handles height, tilt, and rotation, and the panel supports VESA 75 x 75 mm mounting if you want it off the desk and onto an arm.
That combination makes the G24Q easy to slot into a gaming setup or a small home office without much fuss. It also gives Xiaomi a familiar playbook: stack up enough useful specs, keep the price aggressive, and let the monitor market do the rest.
Xiaomi’s monitor lineup keeps expanding
The G24Q is not arriving in isolation. Xiaomi has recently added the Redmi G Pro 32U 2026, which brings 4K resolution, a 160Hz refresh rate, Mini LED technology, and HyperOS 3, alongside the Redmi G27U 2026 with dual-mode 4K at 160Hz and 1080p at 320Hz.
That spread tells you where Xiaomi thinks the opportunity is: broad coverage across entry gaming, high-refresh esports, and higher-end display buyers. The open question is whether the G24Q becomes the obvious budget pick in China or just another very competent monitor in a very crowded aisle.

