Ugreen’s portable monitor is utterly sharp, sleek, and costs a pretty penny

Portable monitors have become the Swiss Army knives of modern tech. They travel with remote workers, expand cramped laptop screens, and occasionally double as gaming displays in hotel rooms. Most of them also follow a familiar formula: a basic Full HD panel, a foldable cover, and a price that stays comfortably under $250. Ugreen clearly looked at that formula and decided to ignore it.

The company’s new AP16 portable monitor has officially landed in the U.S., bringing a feature list that feels more like a premium desktop display than something designed to slip into a backpack. The catch is that it costs $350, placing it well above many rivals.

For people who notice every Pixel

The first thing that separates the AP16 from the crowd is its display. While many portable monitors continue to settle for a 1080p panel, Ugreen opted for a sharper 2560 x 1600 resolution on a 16-inch screen. This makes a noticeable difference in everyday use — text appears cleaner, spreadsheets fit more information onscreen, and photos look noticeably crisper. The choice of a 16:10 aspect ratio helps, too. Anyone who spends their day bouncing between documents, browser tabs, and spreadsheets knows that extra vertical space is surprisingly valuable.

Ugreen

The display also reaches up to 500 nits of brightness, making it easier to use in bright environments where many portable monitors begin to struggle. Add full sRGB coverage and HDR certification, and the AP16 starts looking like a serious secondary display.

A luxury portable monitor, for better or worse

The AP16’s premium ambitions extend beyond the screen. Instead of relying on plastic construction and flimsy folio stands, Ugreen has given the monitor an all-metal chassis and bundled it with a magnetic metal stand that offers far more flexibility than the typical folding cover. At just 6.5mm thick and under a kilogram, it’s still easy enough to toss into a laptop bag.

Ugreen

Gamers also get a pleasant surprise — the 165Hz refresh rate is unusually high for this category, making fast-moving games feel smoother than they would on most portable displays. Of course, all of those upgrades come at a cost. At $349.99, the AP16 enters territory where buyers will naturally compare it against larger desktop monitors or even budget tablets.

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Still, for users who value portability but don’t want to sacrifice image quality, build quality, or refresh rate, Ugreen’s latest display makes a compelling argument. It’s expensive, yes, but unlike many premium gadgets, you can actually see where the money went.

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