Best Curved Ultrawide Gaming Monitors (2026): 34 to 45 Inch

Best Curved Ultrawide Gaming Monitors (2026): 34 to 45 Inch

By · FounderPublished Jun 23, 2026

Curved ultrawide gaming monitors split into three real size classes now: 34 inch, 39 inch, and 45 inch. Each one is a different purchase, not the same monitor in a bigger box. The panel that makes sense at 34 inches is not the panel that makes sense at 45, and the graphics card that feeds a 240 Hz 1440p ultrawide will choke on a 5K2K screen.

So the honest order is size first, then panel, then the GPU each one demands. Below are five picks that cover all three sizes, with the card you need called out for every one.

Our top pick: Alienware AW3425DW

Alienware AW3425DW is the 34-inch QD-OLED that matches every rival on panel quality and undercuts them on price, which makes it the easiest curved ultrawide to recommend to a first-time buyer.

Alienware 34 240Hz QD-OLED Curved Gaming Monitor - AW3425DW - 34.2-inch WQHD (3440 x 1440) 0.03ms Display, 1800R Curve, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, VESA AdaptiveSync, DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400
Alienware 34 240Hz QD-OLED Curved Gaming Monitor - AW3425DW - 34.2-inch WQHD (3440 x 1440) 0.03ms Display, 1800R Curve, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, VESA AdaptiveSync, DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400
$799.99

Quick picks

Quick picks: curved ultrawide gaming monitors at a glance

Specs at a glance

Specs at a glance

How we picked

We sorted by size first because that is the decision that changes what you should buy. A 34-inch ultrawide at 3440x1440 is the mainstream choice and the one a single mid-to-high graphics card can drive at high refresh. Step up to a 39 or 45-inch 5K2K screen and the pixel count nearly doubles, so the GPU requirement jumps with it.

After size, the panel call comes down to QD-OLED versus WOLED. QD-OLED holds an edge in color saturation and glossy contrast, which is why the 34-inch class is all QD-OLED here. The big-format picks use LG's Tandem WOLED because that is what ships at 5K2K, and it trades a little saturation for resolution and brightness.

We also called the graphics card for every pick. A 1440p ultrawide pairs cleanly with a midrange-to-high card, but 5K2K is a different animal that wants a top-tier GPU. If you are still choosing the card, our guide to GPUs for 1440p ultrawide lines up with these picks.

Every pick was confirmed in stock on Amazon at the time of writing. Two of the original 34-inch candidates sold out during research, so the value and premium slots went to in-stock equivalents rather than listing something you cannot buy.

Best Overall: Alienware AW3425DW

The 34-inch QD-OLED to beat, and the default first ultrawide for most buyers.

Alienware 34 240Hz QD-OLED Curved Gaming Monitor - AW3425DW - 34.2-inch WQHD (3440 x 1440) 0.03ms Display, 1800R Curve, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, VESA AdaptiveSync, DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400
Alienware 34 240Hz QD-OLED Curved Gaming Monitor - AW3425DW - 34.2-inch WQHD (3440 x 1440) 0.03ms Display, 1800R Curve, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, VESA AdaptiveSync, DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400
$799.99

Specs

  • Panel

    34" QD-OLED, 1800R curve

  • Resolution

    3440 x 1440 (UWQHD, 21:9)

  • Refresh

    240 Hz

  • Response

    0.03 ms GtG

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR True Black 400, ~1000-nit peak

  • Color

    99.3% DCI-P3, Delta E < 2

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync Premium Pro

What it does well

Class-leading SDR color accuracy out of the box, the lowest input lag in the 34-inch QD-OLED group, 240 Hz a single mid-to-high GPU can feed at native 3440x1440. The 1800R curve is gentle for productivity, immersive for single-player.

The 1800R curve is the gentle kind, so it stays comfortable for a spreadsheet day and still pulls you into a single-player game at night. At native 3440x1440 the 240 Hz ceiling is reachable with one strong card, which is the whole reason this size class stays popular: you do not need a halo GPU to feed it.

On the GPU side: RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT pushes 3440x1440 high-to-ultra near 240 Hz; RTX 5070 / RX 9070 is the floor.

What you give up

No 5K2K sharpness (110 ppi, fine but not retina). HDR peak is good for OLED, not mini-LED bright in a sunlit room. QD-OLED lifted blacks in a bright room are real without ambient control.

Reports also note that QD-OLED black levels lift in a bright room, so bias lighting behind the panel helps. Standard OLED burn-in hygiene applies as well: vary your content and let the panel-care cycles run.

Who it's for

The 1440p-ultrawide buyer pairing a RTX 5070 / 5070 Ti or RX 9070 / 9070 XT who wants the cleanest first OLED ultrawide and won't overpay for a marginally better panel.

Best Value: ASUS ROG Strix XG34WCDG

Same QD-OLED panel quality, the longest burn-in warranty in the group, often the lowest price.

ASUS ROG Strix 34” Ultrawide QD-OLED HDR Gaming Monitor (XG34WCDG) - 3440x1440, 175Hz, 0.03ms, OLED Care Pro, True 10-bit, G-SYNC Compatible, DisplayWidget, Extreme Low Motion Blur, 3 yr Warranty
ASUS ROG Strix 34” Ultrawide QD-OLED HDR Gaming Monitor (XG34WCDG) - 3440x1440, 175Hz, 0.03ms, OLED Care Pro, True 10-bit, G-SYNC Compatible, DisplayWidget, Extreme Low Motion Blur, 3 yr Warranty
$789.12$999.00

Specs

  • Panel

    34" QD-OLED, 1800R curve

  • Resolution

    3440 x 1440 (UWQHD, 21:9)

  • Refresh

    175 Hz

  • Response

    0.03 ms GtG

  • Color

    True 10-bit, wide DCI-P3

  • Care

    OLED Care Pro, 3-yr burn-in warranty

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible

What it does well

True 10-bit color, OLED Care Pro plus a 3-year burn-in warranty that beats most rivals, ELMB motion-blur reduction, and a price that regularly dips below the field. 175 Hz is plenty for single-player and most multiplayer at this resolution.

ELMB motion-blur reduction is here for the times you want extra clarity in fast motion, and the True 10-bit panel keeps gradients clean. When this one is on a deal it tends to be the cheapest way into a 34-inch QD-OLED, which is exactly when it earns the value slot.

On the GPU side: RTX 5070 or RX 9070 feeds 175 Hz at 3440x1440 high; 5070 Ti class and up leaves headroom.

What you give up

175 Hz instead of 240, so the hardest esports use case loses headroom. Deal pricing is what makes it a value pick; at full list it's closer to the pack.

Stock has been thin on this one, so it can sell out. If it is gone, the Alienware AW3423DWF is the obvious in-family QD-OLED fallback at a similar size and panel.

Who it's for

The buyer who wants a QD-OLED 34-inch for mostly single-player and mixed use, values warranty and color over raw refresh, and watches for the deal price.

Best Premium: Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 (G85SD)

The 34-inch pick for a bright room, where a matte coating beats a glossy one.

Samsung 34" Odyssey OLED G8 (G85SD) Ultra-QWHD QD-OLED G-Sync Compatible Curved Gaming Monitor, 175Hz, 0.03ms, Glare-Free Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, 3 Yr Warranty,LS34DG856SNXZA,2024
Samsung 34" Odyssey OLED G8 (G85SD) Ultra-QWHD QD-OLED G-Sync Compatible Curved Gaming Monitor, 175Hz, 0.03ms, Glare-Free Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, 3 Yr Warranty,LS34DG856SNXZA,2024
$959.99$1,199.99

Specs

  • Panel

    34" QD-OLED (3rd gen), 1800R curve

  • Resolution

    3440 x 1440 (UWQHD, 21:9)

  • Refresh

    175 Hz

  • Response

    0.03 ms GtG

  • Coating

    Matte glare-free finish

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR True Black 400

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync Premium Pro, 3-yr warranty

What it does well

Matte coating that tames reflections better than glossy rivals, excellent QD-OLED color and contrast, a thin clean design, and Samsung smart-hub apps built in. 3-year warranty includes burn-in.

The matte coating is the real reason to pick this one over the glossier rivals. In a room with a window behind you, reflections that would wash out a glossy QD-OLED mostly disappear here. Samsung's smart-hub apps are built in too, so it doubles as a casual streaming screen when the PC is off.

On the GPU side: Same as the 34-inch picks: RTX 5070 Ti / RX 9070 XT for 175 Hz ultra, RTX 5070 / RX 9070 floor.

What you give up

Matte coating slightly softens the infinite-contrast pop glossy QD-OLED is famous for. 175 Hz, not 240. The smart-TV OS adds menus some buyers never use.

The matte finish is a taste call. If you love the glossy infinite-contrast pop, the Best Overall pick will look punchier in a controlled-light room. The smart-TV menus also add a layer some buyers will simply ignore.

Who it's for

The buyer in a bright or window-lit room who wants QD-OLED without reflection fighting, and likes the built-in streaming apps as a bonus.

Best Big-Format (39"): LG UltraGear 39GX950B

The sharpest big screen here, and the one that fixes 39-inch text clarity.

LG 39GX950B-B 39-inch Ultragear evo 5K2K WUHD (5120 x 2160) OLED Curved Gaming Monitor, Dual-Mode,165Hz, 0.03ms, NVIDIA G-Sync, FreeSync Premium Pro, DisplayHDR True Black 500, HDMI, DP, USB-C, Black
LG 39GX950B-B 39-inch Ultragear evo 5K2K WUHD (5120 x 2160) OLED Curved Gaming Monitor, Dual-Mode,165Hz, 0.03ms, NVIDIA G-Sync, FreeSync Premium Pro, DisplayHDR True Black 500, HDMI, DP, USB-C, Black
$1,799.99

Specs

  • Panel

    39" Tandem WOLED (4th gen), 1500R curve

  • Resolution

    5120 x 2160 (5K2K, 21:9)

  • Refresh

    165 Hz native; dual-mode 330 Hz at 2560x1080

  • Response

    0.03 ms GtG

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR True Black 500

  • Connectivity

    DP 2.1, HDMI 2.1, USB-C 90W

  • Sync

    G-Sync, FreeSync Premium Pro

What it does well

5K2K sharpness at a size that stays desk-usable, the cleanest text of the big-format options, dual-mode 330 Hz for competitive sessions, modern connectivity (DP 2.1, 90W USB-C). The Tandem WOLED panel is brighter than older WOLED.

Because the same 5K2K pixel count sits on a 39-inch panel instead of a 45-inch one, text is noticeably crisper, which fixes the soft-font problem that plagued older 39-inch 3440x1440 screens. DisplayPort 2.1 and 90W USB-C mean it slots into a modern build or a laptop dock without an adapter.

On the GPU side: RTX 5080 minimum for 5K2K high with DLSS; RTX 5090 for native-ish 5K2K ultra. Not a card-light monitor.

What you give up

5K2K at 165 Hz is genuinely GPU-hungry. WOLED trails QD-OLED slightly in color saturation and can show a faint green tint in some content. Native 165 Hz, not 240.

Buyers have flagged that LG's WOLED panels in this generation can show a faint green tint and slightly less saturation than QD-OLED. And there is no getting around the GPU bill: pairing 5K2K with a midrange card wastes the panel.

Who it's for

The buyer who wants maximum sharpness in a large ultrawide, has a RTX 5080 or better, and values dual-mode flexibility for occasional competitive play.

Editor's Pick (45"): LG UltraGear 45GX950A

The most screen money buys, with an 800R curve that wraps the whole view.

LG 45GX950A-B 45-inch Ultragear 5K2K WUHD (5120 x 2160) OLED Curved Gaming Monitor, Dual-Mode, 165Hz, 0.03ms, NVIDIA G-Sync, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDR True Black 400, USB Type-C 90W, DP2.1
LG 45GX950A-B 45-inch Ultragear 5K2K WUHD (5120 x 2160) OLED Curved Gaming Monitor, Dual-Mode, 165Hz, 0.03ms, NVIDIA G-Sync, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDR True Black 400, USB Type-C 90W, DP2.1
$1,354.64$1,999.99

Specs

  • Panel

    45" WOLED, aggressive 800R curve

  • Resolution

    5120 x 2160 (5K2K, 21:9)

  • Refresh

    165 Hz native; dual-mode 330 Hz at 2560x1080

  • Response

    0.03 ms GtG

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR True Black 400, ~1300-nit peak

  • Density

    125 ppi across 45 inches

  • Sync

    G-Sync, FreeSync Premium Pro; DP 2.1, USB-C 90W

What it does well

Sheer immersion from the 45-inch span and 800R curve, 5K2K that holds 125 ppi at this size, dual-mode 330 Hz, and a brighter peak than the 39-inch sibling in some scenes. A genuine flagship statement piece.

The 800R curve is the most aggressive here, and on a 45-inch panel it genuinely wraps the edges of your vision into the game. Peak brightness runs a touch higher than the 39-inch sibling in some scenes, and the dual-mode 330 Hz option is there when you want to drop into a competitive session.

On the GPU side: RTX 5090 to do 5K2K justice at high refresh; RTX 5080 is the realistic floor with DLSS. AMD has no comfortable 5K2K-ultra card this generation.

What you give up

Enormous, and the 800R curve is polarizing for productivity. WOLED color trails QD-OLED. 5K2K at 165 Hz is the most GPU-demanding target here. Desk depth and price are both significant.

It is a lot of monitor. The 800R curve and 45-inch span are immersive for gaming but awkward for detailed productivity, so measure your desk depth first. The WOLED tint and saturation caveats apply here too, and 5K2K at high refresh is the most GPU-hungry target in this guide.

Who it's for

The enthusiast with a RTX 5090 (or at least a 5080) and the desk space who wants the most immersive single-player and sim experience, and accepts the productivity compromise.

Bottom line

If you want the cleanest first OLED ultrawide without overpaying, buy the Alienware AW3425DW. If you care more about a long burn-in warranty than raw refresh, the ASUS ROG Strix XG34WCDG is the value play.

If your room is bright, the matte Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 (G85SD) fights reflections better. If you want maximum sharpness in a big screen and own a RTX 5080 or better, take the LG UltraGear 39GX950B. If you want the most immersive screen on your desk and a RTX 5090 to drive it, the LG UltraGear 45GX950A is the statement piece.

FAQ

Is a 34, 39, or 45 inch curved ultrawide best for gaming?

It depends on your desk and your graphics card. A 34-inch 3440x1440 ultrawide is the mainstream sweet spot: immersive, sharp at normal viewing distance, and drivable by a midrange-to-high card at high refresh. Move to a 39 or 45-inch 5K2K screen for more immersion and sharpness, but only if you have the desk depth and a top-tier GPU to feed the extra pixels.

What GPU do I need for a curved ultrawide gaming monitor?

For a 34-inch 3440x1440 ultrawide, a RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT pushes high-to-ultra settings near the refresh cap in most games, and a RTX 5070 or RX 9070 is a sensible floor. The 5K2K picks are far more demanding: plan on a RTX 5080 at minimum, ideally a RTX 5090, since the resolution is close to double the pixel count.

Is QD-OLED or WOLED better for a curved ultrawide?

QD-OLED has the edge in color saturation and glossy contrast, which is why every 34-inch pick here uses it. WOLED, in LG's newer Tandem form, is what ships at 5K2K on the 39 and 45-inch screens, and it trades a little saturation (and an occasional faint green tint) for resolution and brightness. Pick QD-OLED for color punch at 34 inches, WOLED for sharpness at the big sizes.

What does dual-mode mean on the LG 5K2K ultrawides?

Dual-mode lets the LG 39 and 45-inch panels switch between their native 5K2K resolution at 165 Hz and a lower 2560x1080 mode at 330 Hz. The high-resolution mode is for single-player and sharpness, the fast mode is for competitive sessions where refresh matters more than pixel count. You toggle it on the monitor, so one screen covers both jobs.

Are curved ultrawide OLED monitors at risk of burn-in?

OLED burn-in is still a consideration, though every pick here ships panel-care features to manage it: pixel shifting, logo dimming, and scheduled cleaning cycles. Reports suggest mixed-use desktops are lower risk than static all-day productivity. ASUS adds a 3-year burn-in warranty on its pick, and Samsung and Alienware include burn-in coverage too. Vary your content and let the care cycles run.

Is 1800R or 800R curvature better for an ultrawide?

1800R is a gentle curve that stays comfortable for both gaming and productivity, which is why the 34-inch picks use it. 800R is an aggressive wraparound curve that maximizes gaming immersion on the 45-inch screen but distorts straight lines enough to bother some spreadsheet work. Choose 1800R for a mixed-use desk, 800R for a gaming-first setup where immersion is the point.

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