Good, the i1 Display pro is the best mainstream sensor on the market, so you're well covered there.
Just as a general comment, I'm continually amazed at how the monitor manufacturers fill up their spec sheets with totally meaningless nonsense, while leaving out the important and relevant stuff.
Percentage of Adobe RGB - yes, it gives a general idea of whether this is a wide gamut unit or not. But the number in itself means absolutely nothing and is completely irrelevant. It's right up there with contrast ratio and brightness (always way too high for practical use anyway). Even worse, dynamic contrast, which is just the difference between max brightness at full blast vs. hitting the "off"-switch. Really useful indeed. Billions of colors, sure. And so on and so on.
Panel uniformity is conspicuously absent. Which makes this a premium spot to cut corners, for manufacturers who compete on price and aim to sell as cheaply as possible. Panel uniformity is expensive. Raw panels from the manufacturers vary enormously in this regard, and the budget brands shop for the cheapest deal, meaning the C and D batches.