mrright, as I said, I'm using an Asus N550JV, and its LG Philips screen is just as good as the NBC review shows - matte, 0.2 cd/m² black level, 1410:1 contrast. And like Leven said, the difference we're talking about here is sharpness. Imagine an AMOLED panel like on the Galaxy Note 4 - infinitely high contrast, perfect black, precise colors, nearly 100% AdobeRGB. Imagine it's FHD and 15.6". Now, get this: it will still lose to QHD, QHD+ and UHD screens of the same size on sharpness. And if the competing screens will have even remotely decent contrast and color accuracy, they'll be more pleasant to use, excluding graphics design tasks. That is the difference I notice between my screen and those on MBP Retinas - not contrast, brightness, colors or anything else.
As for response time, not everyone is a gamer. Besides, below a certain point (which most modern IPS panels are) most people just can't tell a difference between 5 and 10 ms. I certainly can't (same games on my laptop and a desktop with VA screen).
I'm aware that panel type doesn't necessarily reflect its true qualities. (Someone who reads NBC isn't? :D) However, in most cases you do not get good non-IPS panels. At all. If it's TN, it's almost guaranteed to be low-contrast garbage with narrow viewing angles and mediocre to horrible color accuracy. Even an average IPS panel easily beats that in routine use. And you don't get Dreamcolor (which is also IPS, FYI...) in the price range MBPr sells for (excluding maxed out configurations).
Dreamcolor and screens like your AUO with full AdobeRGB coverage certainly have their place, but for most users, a simple high-PPI IPS panel is more useful. They don't need fast response time or 95-100% AdobeRGB. Sharp text and good (slightly better than Dreamcolor, in case of this MBPr) colors, though? Any day.