Quick Answer
The AOC 240Hz wins on response time consistency and brand support in South Africa, while the Dahua 240Hz undercuts on price by R600 to R900. For competitive Valorant, CS2 and Apex players the AOC 24G2SP is the safer pick, but Dahua's LM24-F231F gives you the same refresh rate for entry-level esports budgets.
Setting the Stage: Two Brands Targeting the SA Esports Budget
Dahua and AOC both want the R3,500 to R5,500 SA esports monitor slot, where students upgrading from 60Hz finally taste 240Hz. AOC has been in this game for over a decade with the G-line, so panel binning and firmware are mature. Dahua, better known locally for surveillance gear, has aggressively entered the gaming display market in 2025 with sharp Rand pricing thanks to direct-import volume. Both options ship with 2-year warranties through Evetech, and both clear the threshold for serious 240Hz play. The question is which compromises you'd rather live with.
Head-to-Head Spec Comparison
Panel: AOC 24G2SP runs a Fast IPS panel at 24-inch 1080p, hitting 1ms GtG and rated 250 nits. Dahua LM24-F231F uses a Fast VA panel, 24-inch 1080p, 1ms MPRT and 300 nits brightness. IPS wins on viewing angles and colour, VA wins on contrast for night-time play.
Refresh and Sync: Both hit 240Hz over DisplayPort 1.4. AOC supports FreeSync Premium and is G-Sync Compatible verified. Dahua supports FreeSync but is not G-Sync Compatible certified, so RTX users may see occasional tearing in non-FreeSync titles.
Inputs: AOC ships 2x HDMI 2.0 plus 1x DisplayPort 1.4. Dahua ships 1x HDMI 2.0 plus 1x DisplayPort 1.4, which limits multi-source flexibility for streamers.
Pricing in SA: AOC 24G2SP lands around R4,500. Dahua LM24-F231F sits closer to R3,700, a R800 saving that buys you a decent gaming mouse.
Real-World Performance for SA Gamers
In Valorant at 240fps, both monitors feel snappy. The AOC's IPS panel shows cleaner text and slightly less smearing on dark Bind angles, while the Dahua's VA contrast makes Haven's shadowed corners pop. CS2 players will prefer the AOC because Fast IPS handles smoke transitions and flash recovery more consistently. Apex players gravitate toward the Dahua's deeper blacks for King's Canyon at night. Neither monitor has overshoot issues at the recommended Overdrive setting, but the Dahua's "Strong" preset does introduce slight inverse ghosting.
Value Proposition for SA Buyers
If you're spending under R4,000 total on the monitor, the Dahua is the clear value pick because nothing else hits 240Hz at that Rand price. If you can stretch to R4,500, the AOC's better local support, longer track record and superior IPS colour accuracy make it the smarter long-term choice for a 5-year monitor. Loadshedding-aware buyers should note both monitors auto-resume after power cuts without re-pairing, and both pull around 25W during gaming, which is light load on any decent UPS. For varsity LAN events the AOC has the edge in tournament reliability since Dahua's gaming line is still building its track record at Comic Con and rAge-style competitive setups. Resale value also tilts to AOC, with G-series monitors holding around 60% of value at the 2-year mark on the second-hand market.If you're spending under R4,000 total on the monitor, the Dahua is the clear value pick because nothing else hits 240Hz at that Rand price. If you can stretch to R4,500, the AOC's better local support, longer track record and superior IPS colour accuracy make it the smarter long-term choice for a 5-year monitor. Loadshedding-aware buyers should note both monitors auto-resume after power cuts without re-pairing, and both pull around 25W during gaming, which is light load on any decent UPS.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 240Hz a noticeable upgrade over 144Hz for casual SA gamers?
For casual play, the jump is subtle. You'll feel it most in CS2, Valorant and Apex where micro-flicks matter. If you're playing PUBG or League at silver rank, the R1,500 saved staying with 144Hz is better spent on a 1440p panel.
Will my GPU push 240fps on either monitor?
At 1080p, an RTX 4060 or RX 7600 hits 240fps comfortably in esports titles. Triple-A games will sit in the 90 to 140fps range, which both monitors still display at full smoothness via FreeSync.
Which has better panel quality control coming into SA?
AOC has the longer track record locally, with established RMA channels in Joburg and Cape Town. Dahua's gaming monitor RMA pipeline is newer but supported by Evetech's 2-year warranty, so dead-pixel claims are handled smoothly either way.
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