Quick Answer

Ghosting on a ROG Ally X - trails behind fast motion on its 7-inch 1080p 120Hz screen - is fixed by running the panel at its full 120Hz, enabling Variable Refresh Rate, and capping frames to a steady level. The Ally X's fast IPS panel ghosts little when set correctly. The ROG Ally X runs roughly R13,000-R16,000 in SA.

Why The Ally X Might Show Ghosting

The ROG Ally X has a good 1080p 120Hz IPS panel that shouldn't ghost noticeably when configured right. The usual cause is the screen running below 120Hz, or uneven frame pacing from an uncapped game swinging between 50 and 90fps. Confirm the display is set to 120Hz in Windows and enable VRR so the refresh rate tracks the frame rate, smoothing motion.

Settings That Clean Up Motion

Cap the frame rate to a level you can hold steadily - 60fps for AAA on the 120Hz panel - so frames arrive evenly. Set Armoury Crate to Turbo (25W) when plugged in for consistent frame delivery, which reduces the dips that make trailing visible. Enable AMD's frame generation in supported titles for smoother perceived motion.

Drivers Matter

Because the Ally X runs Windows, install the latest AMD Adrenalin driver. Stale drivers can cause frame-pacing issues that look like ghosting. Keep the BIOS updated too, as ASUS firmware improves display and power behaviour.

FAQ

Why does my ROG Ally X screen show motion trails?

Usually the panel is running below 120Hz, or frames are pacing unevenly. Set the display to 120Hz in Windows, enable VRR, and cap frames to a steady level.

Does VRR help ghosting on the ROG Ally X?

Yes. Variable Refresh Rate matches the screen's refresh to the frame rate, smoothing motion and reducing the uneven pacing that makes trailing visible.

Should I update drivers to fix Ally X ghosting?

Yes. The Ally X runs Windows, so install the latest AMD Adrenalin driver and ASUS BIOS - stale firmware causes frame-pacing issues that resemble ghosting.

TIP

| Set the Ally X panel to 120Hz and cap a steady 60fps with VRR on - even frame delivery removes most perceived motion trailing.