Tracked Brand Leaderboard
6 brands currently found from published monitor listings.
Alienware / Dell
Samsung
ASUS
Dell
BenQ
How MonitorSuggest tracks monitor brands
Brand tracking is most useful when it is connected to real products instead of a fixed editorial list. A monitor brand can look strong in marketing material, but buyers need to know how many models are actually listed, which categories the brand covers, how the monitors are rated, what community votes say, and whether the brand has country-specific buying data. That is why this page now reads from the published monitor database rather than only from a manual leaderboard.
Every brand card on this page is built from monitors that already exist inside MonitorSuggest. When a new monitor is published with a brand name, that brand can automatically appear here. The system counts listed monitors, averages their overall star ratings, averages monitor quality and feature scores, totals user votes, and checks which country stores have affiliate data. This makes the page useful for readers and easier to maintain from the backend. If a brand has ten listed models, it should not be shown the same way as a brand with only one placeholder entry.
The overall brand score is not meant to be a vague reputation number. It is a practical rollup of the monitors currently listed on the site. If a brand's listed monitors have strong product quality, useful features, reliable ratings, and positive vote activity, that strength appears in the brand score. If a brand has limited models, weak ratings, or missing country coverage, the page makes that visible too. This approach is more honest than claiming every famous brand is equally strong in every region or category.
Country coverage is especially important for monitor shopping. A brand may sell a popular OLED in the United States but not in India. Another brand may have good budget IPS monitors in Asia but poor affiliate coverage in Europe. A buyer does not just need to know whether a monitor exists; they need to know whether the product is available in a relevant store, with a local price, a local warranty route, and a usable purchase link. The country chips on brand cards help show where the site has mapped offers or store data.
Clicking a brand opens a brand-specific monitor list on the same page. That detail view groups monitors by use case, such as gaming, productivity, creator work, budget, or general use. This matters because a brand can be excellent in one category and average in another. LG may have strong OLED gaming displays. Dell may be more attractive for office productivity and creator-focused IPS monitors. Samsung may be strong in ultrawide and high-refresh options. The category grouping gives readers a faster way to understand what a brand is actually good at.
The page also supports internal linking. A reader can start with a brand, open its monitors, then move to a single monitor page, compare page, or buying guide. That improves navigation and helps search engines understand how brand-level information connects to product-level information. It also keeps the site from creating thin brand pages that repeat generic manufacturer claims. The useful content is the structured connection between brand, monitors, ratings, votes, countries, categories, and affiliate availability.
For backend management, the system stays simple. Add a monitor, fill in the brand and model, add specs, ratings, and affiliate offers, then publish when the monitor passes the publish gate. The Brands We Track page will update from that data. If you add country prices or affiliate links in the Affiliate Engine, the country coverage on brand cards can expand. If users vote on monitors or ratings are adjusted from the backend, the brand score changes with the monitor data. That makes the page future-proof for manual updates, CSV imports, and AI-assisted data entry.
This page should be read as a live brand intelligence board, not a paid ranking. Scores depend on listed data and can change as the database grows. A lower score does not always mean a brand is bad; it may mean the site has fewer listed monitors or less complete country data. A higher score means the currently listed monitors from that brand are performing well across rating, quality, features, and community signals. For best results, open the brand, compare individual monitors, and confirm the current regional price before buying.
Brands We Track FAQ
How does a brand appear on this page?
A brand appears when at least one published monitor has that brand saved in the monitor backend. The page reads live monitor data instead of relying only on a manual brand list.
What does the overall brand rating mean?
The overall rating is an average signal from the listed monitors under that brand, including monitor star ratings, quality, feature strength, and vote activity.
Why do some brands show more countries than others?
Country coverage depends on affiliate store data, country prices, ASINs, or affiliate links saved for monitors from that brand. More complete offer data creates better regional coverage.
Can I click a brand to see its monitors?
Yes. Each brand card links to a brand-specific view that groups all listed monitors from that brand by use case or category.
Are brand scores permanent?
No. Scores can change when new monitors are listed, ratings are updated, user votes change, or affiliate country coverage improves.
Does a high brand score mean every monitor from that brand is good?
No. A brand score is a summary. Always open the individual monitor page and compare specs, price, use case, and country availability before buying.
How are votes used in brand tracking?
The page totals likes and dislikes from monitors listed under each brand. Those signals help show whether users are responding positively to that brandโs listed products.
Can missing brands be requested?
Yes. Use the Suggest a Monitor or Brand page to request a brand that is not tracked yet. Once monitors for that brand are listed, it can appear here automatically.