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With the help of hubs/splitters, this laptop can technically run 8 displays simultaneously, including the built-in display: 1 built-in display, up to 3 displays on the USB4 port, and up to a total of 4 displays on the HDMI + USB3.2 port. The bandwidth available on each port will limit the resolution and frequency of the multiple displays connected in practice. Without the help of hubs/splitters, the laptop can be connected to 3 external monitors (one each on the HDMI, USB4, and USB3.2 port). Higher refresh rates are supported, except for 8K displays, which are limited to 60Hz. Note that this is not a gaming laptop and does not support VRR.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I would bet my (non-cherry-key) keyboard that you can hook up to 3 monitors - one HDMI, one via USB-C 3.2 most likely Gen 2 with DP passthrough, maybe another one via USB-C 4 likely with DP passthrough. But you’ll have to wait for Asus confirmation as full port info not in specs. Look also to Asus for info details on Hz for attached monitors. We know the built-in panel is panel-limited to 60 Hz, but I can think of no good reason for any irrational Hz restriction on HDMI or DP out. At least one of those can surely be set to output direct from dGPU given how good Asus is at that sort of thing.
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