@Yuan Chin
For video editing, you can go with sRGB or DCI-P3 monitors. 10-bit monitors are usually AdobeRGB monitors which are the Dell UP or BenQ SW series which are noticeably more expensive.
I don't recommend 27 or 32-inch 4K monitors for MacOS because there are issues with scaling of files in some graphic design software, e.g. Photoshop, Affinity Photo. Basically with a 4K file, you'll just see a scaled down file at 100% instead of 4K on 4K.
Also if you run 4K without scaling, the text can be kinda small. Test it yourself with your MBP, just go into System Preferences, Display and scale the UI to the smallest text. That's the UI you can expect with 32-inch 4K. If you're fine with that, then go ahead.
Note the BenQ PD3200U does not have USB-C so you will need a display adapter.
If you have the budget, try to look for monitors with USB-C power delivery so that they can charge your laptop.
Another monitor to consider is the LG 5K 27-inch monitors.
@Yuan Chin
For video editing, you can go with sRGB or DCI-P3 monitors. 10-bit monitors are usually AdobeRGB monitors which are the Dell UP or BenQ SW series which are noticeably more expensive.
I don't recommend 27 or 32-inch 4K monitors for MacOS because there are issues with scaling of files in some graphic design software, e.g. Photoshop, Affinity Photo. Basically with a 4K file, you'll just see a scaled down file at 100% instead of 4K on 4K.
Also if you run 4K without scaling, the text can be kinda small. Test it yourself with your MBP, just go into System Preferences, Display and scale the UI to the smallest text. That's the UI you can expect with 32-inch 4K. If you're fine with that, then go ahead.
Note the BenQ PD3200U does not have USB-C so you will need a display adapter.
If you have the budget, try to look for monitors with USB-C power delivery so that they can charge your laptop.
Another monitor to consider is the LG 5K 27-inch monitors.