Asus has pushed its 32-inch ProArt PA329CV down to $895, a sharp cut from $1,299 that makes a creator-focused 6K display look a lot less like a luxury purchase and a lot more like a plausible upgrade. For anyone editing photos, grading video, or just trying to avoid the eternal curse of dull office monitors, that is the kind of discount that gets attention fast.

Asus ProArt PA329CV specs and price
The ProArt PA329CV is built around a 32-inch IPS panel with a 6016 x 3384 resolution, plus 98% DCI-P3 coverage and 100% sRGB. That puts it squarely in the territory of serious content work, where color accuracy matters more than flashy specs on a box.
Asus also pre-calibrates the panel to Delta E, which means it ships ready to use instead of asking buyers to do the calibration dance themselves. That is a practical advantage against rivals that may have similar panel specs but still expect the user to do the setup work.
- 32-inch IPS panel
- 6016 x 3384 resolution
- 98% DCI-P3 color coverage
- 100% sRGB wide color gamut
- Thunderbolt 4, HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C, USB-A, and a 3.5mm headphone jack
Thunderbolt 4 is the real convenience play
The port selection is where Asus quietly makes the monitor more useful than its spec sheet alone suggests. Thunderbolt 4 can carry data and power over a single cable, and you can daisy-chain two monitors if your setup needs more screen real estate. That kind of flexibility is exactly why creator displays keep inching beyond simple ”sharp panel” territory.
There is also a small but welcome dose of practicality in the rest of the I/O lineup: HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C, USB-A, and a headphone jack. Plenty of monitors can show an image; fewer make your desk less annoying.
Why this discount is getting noticed
At $895, the ProArt PA329CV is no longer competing only with other premium creator monitors; it is also rubbing shoulders with workstation displays from Dell and BenQ that often live in the same price conversation. For a 32-inch panel with this resolution and calibration story, Asus has moved it from ”good investment” to ”harder to ignore.”
The catch, as always, is that the best display for a creator is the one that fits both workflow and desk space. But if this price sticks around, expect a lot of people who were ”just browsing” to suddenly develop very strong opinions about Thunderbolt 4 and pixel density.

