Yes, strobless Hz-based blur reduction is pretty much the Way of the Future anyway.
360fps at 360Hz on my ASUS PG259QN (2.8ms MPRT non-strobed) looks uncannily close to the motion clarity of a 2012-era LIghtBoost monitor, ASUS VG248QE (at LightBoost 100% = 2ms flash = 2ms MPRT)
Although I enspouse 1000fps 1000Hz as the threshold, the mainstream threshold could easily be 480fps 480Hz, with GtG’s sufficiently fast (e.g. under 2ms GtG100%). It’d look exactly as clear as LightBoost was, except you don’t need strobing!
I have seen prototype 1000fps 1000Hz, and it’s definitely superior to strobing — less motion blur than LightBoost had ten years ago. But no stroboscopic artifacts, no flicker, and no picture dimming. PWM-free blur reduction, combining eye friendliness with motion blur reduction. Once GPUs can do 1000fps cheaply, then strobing would mainly be useful for retro frame rates in situations where you don’t want to add artifical frames (interpolated, extrapolated or otherwise reprojected).