Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
- 24.5-inch IPS panel
- 2560 x 1440 QHD resolution
- 280Hz native refresh rate, overclocked to 300Hz
- 1ms GTG response time
- 0.5ms MPRT
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.
Lenovo has rolled out a compact 2K gaming monitor in China that tries to square an awkward circle: 1440p resolution, esports-friendly speed, and a price that does not immediately trigger buyer’s remorse. The new Lecoo Bellator Zhan 25Q is a 24.5-inch IPS display with a pre-sale price of 899 yuan ($132), putting it in the same fast-and-cheap race that has recently pulled rivals like TCL into the sub-$100 and sub-$150 bracket.
The Lenovo gaming monitor’s pitch is clear enough. Smaller screens usually make competitive gaming feel sharper, while 2K panels are increasingly common on 27-inch monitors. Lenovo is betting that shrinking the panel to 24.5 inches gives players a denser image without forcing them into a bigger desktop footprint. That is a sensible move, especially for users who sit close to the screen and care more about target tracking than cinematic scale.
Lenovo gaming monitor Zhan 25Q display specs
The panel runs at a native 280Hz and can be overclocked to 300Hz. Lenovo also claims 1ms gray-to-gray response time and 0.5ms Moving Picture Response Time, plus Variable Refresh Rate support to cut tearing and stutter during fast motion.
- 24.5-inch IPS panel
- 2560 x 1440 QHD resolution
- 280Hz native refresh rate, overclocked to 300Hz
- 1ms GTG response time
- 0.5ms MPRT
Color, HDR, and low blue light features
Lenovo says the monitor covers 99% of sRGB and 95% of DCI-P3, with 8-bit + FRC handling to simulate 10-bit color and produce 1.07 billion colors. HDR support is included as well, with peak brightness listed at 400 nits in HDR mode. That is not elite HDR territory, but it is enough to keep the spec sheet looking competitive.
The company also adds TÜV Rheinland-certified hardware-level low blue light technology, which is a better bet than software filters if you actually want to reduce blue light without the familiar yellow cast. In other words: a small practical win, not just marketing perfume.
Ports, stand, and speakers
The Zhan 25Q includes two HDMI 2.1 FRL ports with 48Gbps bandwidth, one DisplayPort 1.4 connector, a USB 2.0 port, and a 3.5mm audio jack. Lenovo also built in two 3W stereo speakers, which will do the job for system sounds and the occasional video, though serious players will still reach for headphones.
The stand supports 130mm height adjustment, -6 to 21.5 degrees of tilt, and 90-degree pivot for vertical use. Thin bezels on three sides and a compact base make it easier to fit on cramped desks, while 100 x 100mm VESA compatibility gives buyers the option to mount it elsewhere.
The real question is whether Lenovo can keep this kind of pricing pressure going while preserving panel quality. The monitor class is getting crowded fast, and the next buyer decision will not be about raw speed alone; it will be about which brand can make the most convincing case that 300Hz and 1440p belong together at this price.

