Gaming monitors

 Whether you’re looking for cool new designs, stunning new panels or speedy new tech, CES rarely disappoints for gaming monitors. CES 2022 was mostly remote for a lot of us, but that didn’t mean companies didn’t bring out the big guns for our virtual amusement. 

Among the non-product-specific monitor news, Samsung announced it will be adding its HDR10 Plus technology for gaming. Like HDR10 Plus for TVs, it’s Samsung’s technology for using game designer-provided information to vary the way HDR is rendered on a scene-by-scene or shot-by-shot basis rather than using a single curve for an entire game. It’s similar to Dolby Vision but free to license.

Alienware 34 Gaming Monitor (AW3423DW) 

Alienware’s 34-inch curved monitor is probably my favorite of the show. It uses Samsung’s new QD-OLED panel, which combines the great color rendering of Samsung’s Quantum Dot technology with the contrast, color precision and speed of OLED for a display that promises to look beautiful and perform well. And unlike a lot of whizzy monitors that get announced at CES, which tend to ship later in the year, Alienware’s is expected by March 29 (it will ship first in China on March 2 and expand to other regions in April). But we don’t yet have a price. The biggest downside is it lacks an HDMI 2.1 connection, which makes it suboptimal to connect to a console (you can use it, but you won’t get variable refresh rate support).

Samsung Odyssey Ark

Samsung Odyssey Ark, the ballet dancer of gaming

We got minimal information about Samsung’s minimalist gaming monitor, but its most salient feature — aside from its stunning design — is that it’s a 55-incher you can rotate into portrait mode for a “cockpit-style” view. I’m not sold on the logistics of using a monitor that big on a desktop (and I’ve tried), much less using it rotating it. But if the design makes its way down to 49 inches, I’m there, provided it uses a similarly awesome panel technology, like MicroLED, which we’ve yet to see in a desktop monitor or QD-OLED. And that it doesn’t cost $5,000 or ship several years from now.

Samsung Odyssey G8 Neo QLED (G85NB)

It’s nowhere near as pretty as the Odyssey Ark and isn’t the first of its kind, but a 32-inch version of the pricey 49-inch Odyssey G9 Neo QLED launched in July last year is still floats-my-boat-worthy. Like it did with the G9 Neo QLED, Samsung offered just a teaser for the G8, with no price or ship date. But it has a similar high-contrast curved screen with a peak brightness of 2,000 nits in HDR, a 240Hz refresh rate and a 1-millisecond gray-to-gray response time, as well as the same design as the Odyssey G7 and G9 (in white) and support for FreeSync Premium Pro and G-Sync.

ViewSonic Elite XG321UG

This display stands out for me for a couple of reasons. It has notable specs: a 32-inch HDR 4K DisplayHDR 1400 monitor with a 1,152-zone Mini LED backlight, 144Hz refresh rate and Nvidia Reflex latency analysis support, which hits almost all the right checkboxes (no HDMI 2.1, for one). At $2,500 it’s expensive, but about par for a high-end gaming monitor. Plus it gets bonus points for shipping within the next couple of months. The other reason is the stand design, which not only looks better than most competitors (at least in my aesthetic), but it’s got a flat base. I need every inch of desk space and hate stands that either take up too much, can’t comfortably accommodate stashing a keyboard on the base or that you can’t pile things on. 

Razer Project Sophia

One of Razer’s concept reveals, Project Sophia is sort of an all-in-one gaming PC/desk/living area. I just see it as a 65-inch monitor that you’re going to regret having bought after two years, or possibly the gaming equivalent of a jumpsuit.

Asus ROG Swift OLED PG42UQ and PG48UQ

Acer Predator CG48

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