TN panels still exist because display buying is not only about color; speed, cost, power use, and purpose still matter.
TN Survives Because Speed Still Sells
TN, or Twisted Nematic, remains relevant because it was built around quick pixel transitions. For competitive players, that can mean less blur in fast camera pans, cleaner target tracking, and a display that feels direct rather than cinematic.

That is why TN still appears in esports-focused monitors, even as IPS has improved dramatically. A 24-inch 1080p high-refresh screen is not trying to be a color-grading display; it is trying to make every frame easier to react to.
IPS and VA are better for most people, but TN still has a practical identity: performance first, image quality second. TN is typically the low-cost, very-fast option, while IPS favors color and viewing angles and VA favors contrast.
Color Is Better Elsewhere, But Not Everyone Needs It
IPS panels are the obvious choice when color consistency matters. They are strong for creative work, shared screens, and productivity setups where you view documents, dashboards, and calls from different angles. That is why many productivity recommendations prioritize resolution, pixel density, ergonomics, and color consistency over pure refresh speed.

VA has a different strength: contrast. It can make dark interfaces, movies, and shadow-heavy games look deeper than many standard IPS displays. For immersive single-player gaming or media, that contrast often feels more valuable than TN’s speed.
TN’s weakness is visible: colors can look flatter, black levels are usually unimpressive, and off-angle viewing can shift the image quickly. But if you sit centered, play fast games, and care more about motion than mood, those tradeoffs may be acceptable.
Budget Builds and Bulk Setups Still Need Simple Screens
TN also survives because not every monitor is a flagship purchase. Schools, offices, kiosks, secondary screens, and budget gaming desks may need a reliable display more than a wide-gamut panel.
A cheap TN monitor can still handle email, spreadsheets, chat windows, monitoring tools, or a spare gaming setup. In that role, “good enough” image quality plus low cost can beat a better-looking panel that stretches the budget.
This is especially true in multi-monitor setups. If your main screen is a high-quality IPS or VA display, a TN side monitor for static tools, timelines, or system stats can still make sense. TN fits competitive 1080p gaming and tight budgets, IPS fits color-sensitive office and mixed-use work, VA fits deeper contrast and cinematic immersion, and OLED or Mini-LED fits premium HDR and black levels.

Modern IPS Has Reduced TN’s Advantage
The honest pressure on TN is that IPS has become much faster. Many current gaming monitors now offer high refresh rates, low response times, and far better image quality than older IPS models.
That narrows TN’s reason to exist. If an IPS monitor gives you 144Hz, 180Hz, or even higher refresh performance with better color and wider viewing angles, most buyers should choose IPS. Current gaming guidance often treats panel type as one part of the decision alongside resolution and refresh rate, not the only deciding factor.
The nuance is that manufacturer response-time claims are not always equal across panels, so real-world reviews matter more than a single “1ms” sticker.
The Bottom Line: TN Is a Specialist, Not the Default
TN panels still exist because they solve a narrow problem well: fast, affordable, low-friction display performance. They are not the best choice for creators, movie lovers, hybrid workers, or anyone who wants rich color and stable viewing angles.
For most modern buyers, IPS is the safer all-around pick and VA is the better contrast-value choice. TN only makes sense when your priority is speed per dollar, especially for centered, competitive play where every visual luxury is secondary to response.





