Best Gaming Monitors for 007 First Light (2026): OLED Picks

Best Gaming Monitors for 007 First Light (2026): OLED Picks

By · FounderPublished Jun 18, 2026

007 First Light spends half its runtime in the dark. Dim embassy corridors, moonlit rooftop infiltration, a stairwell lit by one flickering bulb. That is where the panel does the work, because a screen that holds true blacks and shadow detail at the same time shows you the guard in the corner that an edge-lit LCD washes into gray. The lighting carries the tension, and the monitor either renders it or it does not.

So the right pick starts with contrast, then follows your resolution and your GPU. The five panels below ladder by tier, the same tiers our 007 First Light GPU guide uses, with OLED leading because this is the game that rewards it.

Our top pick: Alienware AW2725DF

The Alienware AW2725DF is the panel 007 First Light was made to be seen on: a 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED that puts per-pixel black control behind every dark scene, at the resolution an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT feeds at high refresh.

Alienware AW2725DF OLED Gaming Monitor - 26.7-inch Quantom-Dot WQHD (2560x1440) 360Hz 0.03Ms Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDMI/DP/USB 3.2 Gen1, Height/Tilt/Swivel/Pivot Adjustability - Black
Alienware AW2725DF OLED Gaming Monitor - 26.7-inch Quantom-Dot WQHD (2560x1440) 360Hz 0.03Ms Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDMI/DP/USB 3.2 Gen1, Height/Tilt/Swivel/Pivot Adjustability - Black
$626.82

Quick picks

Quick picks

Specs at a glance

  • Size

    26.7 inch

    Resolution

    2560 x 1440

    Refresh

    360Hz

    Panel

    QD-OLED

    HDR

    TrueBlack 400

  • Size

    27 inch

    Resolution

    2560 x 1440

    Refresh

    180Hz (O/C 200Hz)

    Panel

    IPS

    HDR

    HDR10

  • Size

    32 inch

    Resolution

    3840 x 2160

    Refresh

    240Hz

    Panel

    QD-OLED

    HDR

    True Black 400

  • Size

    32 inch

    Resolution

    3840 x 2160

    Refresh

    160Hz (Dual 320Hz)

    Panel

    Fast IPS

    HDR

    DisplayHDR

  • Size

    34.2 inch 21:9

    Resolution

    3440 x 1440

    Refresh

    240Hz

    Panel

    QD-OLED (1800R)

    HDR

    TrueBlack 400

How we picked

007 First Light asks one question of your screen before anything else: can it hold a black. The game leans on dark interiors and night infiltration, and that is exactly where panel type decides the experience. A QD-OLED turns each pixel off for true black, so a shadowed hallway keeps its detail instead of lifting into the gray haze an edge-lit IPS shows in the same scene. That is why OLED leads this list and why the top pick is a 1440p QD-OLED rather than the cheapest panel that runs the game.

Resolution and refresh come next, and they map to your GPU. 1440p is the resolution the game's recommended cards feed at high refresh, so an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT pairs with the 1440p picks. 4K is the showcase resolution the spec sheet names, and it is a conversation for an RTX 5080 or 5090 leaning on DLSS 4.5. The 007 First Light GPU guide covers which card hits which frame rate; this guide hands each of those tiers the matching screen. If you want the full framework behind pairing a card to a panel, the how to choose a GPU and matching monitor pillar lays it out.

A word on HDR, because it is where most buyers leave performance on the table. On an OLED, set the game to HGiG rather than dynamic tone mapping, calibrate the system HDR for deep blacks, and turn Film Grain off. Film grain dumps noise into dark areas and undoes the exact black depth you bought the OLED for. Get that right and the night scenes look the way the developers framed them.

Last, refresh rate. This is a single-player stealth game, not an esports title, so the 240Hz and 360Hz numbers on the OLED picks are smoothness headroom and a bonus for whatever else you play, not a competitive requirement. DLSS 4.5 multi-frame generation can push a high-refresh OLED toward those ceilings, but treat it as a smoothness multiplier on an already-playable frame rate, not a performance level you are buying the panel to reach. Match the screen to the contrast and resolution you want first; the refresh ceiling is the part you grow into.

Best 1440p OLED (Top Pick): Alienware AW2725DF

Alienware AW2725DF OLED Gaming Monitor - 26.7-inch Quantom-Dot WQHD (2560x1440) 360Hz 0.03Ms Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDMI/DP/USB 3.2 Gen1, Height/Tilt/Swivel/Pivot Adjustability - Black
Alienware AW2725DF OLED Gaming Monitor - 26.7-inch Quantom-Dot WQHD (2560x1440) 360Hz 0.03Ms Display, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, HDMI/DP/USB 3.2 Gen1, Height/Tilt/Swivel/Pivot Adjustability - Black
$626.82

Specs

  • Size

    26.7 inch

  • Resolution

    2560 x 1440 (QHD)

  • Refresh

    360 Hz

  • Panel

    QD-OLED

  • Response

    0.03 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    HDR TrueBlack 400

  • Sync

    FreeSync Premium Pro, G-Sync Compatible

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort, USB 3.2 Gen1

What it does well

QD-OLED gives per-pixel light control, which is the whole point in a game that spends half its runtime in dark embassies and night infiltration. Blacks are true black, so a dim guard-lit hallway keeps its shadow detail instead of the gray wash an edge-lit IPS shows in the same frame. You see into the dark, which is where 007 First Light lives. The 0.03ms response keeps moonlit traversal and fast camera pans crisp, with none of the smearing a slower panel adds when you whip the view around a corner.

1440p is the resolution the game's recommended cards feed at high refresh, so an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT runs it native with DLSS 4.5 in reserve. At 360Hz the panel has room for DLSS 4.5 multi-frame generation to push smoothness when you want it, though the game does not demand that ceiling. FreeSync Premium Pro and G-Sync Compatible both smooth frame-pacing on either GPU brand, and the full height, tilt, swivel, and pivot stand makes it a clean daily driver well beyond the game.

What you give up

QD-OLED carries the usual burn-in consideration. Buyers have flagged it for years, though 2026 panel-care firmware plus the warranty mitigate it well; the practical advice is to not leave a static HUD frozen on screen for hours. Full-screen HDR brightness is lower than a Mini-LED panel, so the brightest daylight set-pieces will not punch as hard as they would on a 1000-nit LCD. In a game this dark, that trade favors OLED, but it is a real difference in the rare bright scene.

And 360Hz is more refresh than a single-player stealth game needs. Part of what you pay for sits unused unless you also play fast competitive titles, where the high refresh becomes the reason to own this exact panel.

Who it's for

The 1440p player on an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT class card who wants 007 First Light's dark scenes rendered with real contrast, and treats the high refresh as a bonus for whatever they play next. If you want to compare it against other panels in the category, our 1440p OLED monitor picks go deeper across QD-OLED and WOLED options.

Best Value (1440p IPS): LG UltraGear 27GS75Q-B

LG 27GS75Q-B 27-inch Ultragear QHD (2560x1440) Gaming Monitor, 180Hz (O/C 200Hz), 1ms, IPS, NVIDIA G-SYNC Compatible, AMD FreeSync, HDR10, Tilt/Height/Pivot Stand, HDMI, DisplayPort, Black
LG 27GS75Q-B 27-inch Ultragear QHD (2560x1440) Gaming Monitor, 180Hz (O/C 200Hz), 1ms, IPS, NVIDIA G-SYNC Compatible, AMD FreeSync, HDR10, Tilt/Height/Pivot Stand, HDMI, DisplayPort, Black
$179.99

Specs

  • Size

    27 inch

  • Resolution

    2560 x 1440 (QHD)

  • Refresh

    180 Hz (O/C 200 Hz)

  • Panel

    IPS

  • Response

    1 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    HDR10

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort

What it does well

This is the value anchor: a 27-inch 1440p IPS panel that hits the resolution 007 First Light targets without the OLED price. IPS keeps the daytime Mediterranean set-pieces color-accurate with wide viewing angles, which matters when you sit close to a 27-inch screen. The panel runs 180Hz and overclocks to 200Hz, more refresh than a single-player stealth game asks for, and an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 feeds 1440p Ultra here with upscaling headroom to spare.

G-Sync Compatible and FreeSync both smooth the frame-pacing through the heavier set-pieces, and the full tilt, height, and pivot stand means you skip the monitor-arm purchase. For the buyer who wants the correct resolution for the game and is spending the budget on the GPU, this is the honest pick.

What you give up

The honest trade for this article is contrast. IPS HDR is edge-lit, not per-pixel, so the dark embassy corridors and night infiltration that define 007 First Light keep a faint gray lift instead of the true black the OLED picks deliver. HDR10 here is a basic certification, not a contrast feature. If the game's dark-scene presentation is the reason you are upgrading, this panel is the compromise tier, not the showcase. It runs the game beautifully in daylight and handles motion cleanly; it just cannot show you into the shadows the way an OLED does.

Who it's for

The 1440p builder on an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 class card who wants the correct resolution for the game at the lowest cost and is fine trading OLED contrast for IPS value. A strong first high-refresh 1440p monitor where the money went to the card.

Best 4K OLED (Premium): MSI MPG 321URX

msi MPG 321URX QD-OLED, 32" 4K UHD Quantum Dot OLED Gaming Monitor, 3840 x 2160, 0.03ms, 240Hz, True Black HDR 400, 90W USB Type C, HDMI, DP Port
msi MPG 321URX QD-OLED, 32" 4K UHD Quantum Dot OLED Gaming Monitor, 3840 x 2160, 0.03ms, 240Hz, True Black HDR 400, 90W USB Type C, HDMI, DP Port
$829.99

Specs

  • Size

    32 inch

  • Resolution

    3840 x 2160 (4K UHD)

  • Refresh

    240 Hz

  • Panel

    QD-OLED

  • Response

    0.03 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    True Black HDR 400

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync

  • Ports

    HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort, 90W USB-C

What it does well

This is the showcase. QD-OLED per-pixel light control at 4K renders the game's dark interiors and HDR set-pieces with true blacks the IPS picks cannot reach, and at 32 inches the detail in distant scenery and faces is a clear step beyond 1440p. True Black HDR 400 with effectively infinite contrast suits the night infiltration the game leans on, and 240Hz with a 0.03ms response keeps fast camera moves clean. The 90W USB-C handles a single-cable setup, and HDMI 2.1 covers a console alongside the PC.

On an RTX 5080 or 5090, DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution and multi-frame generation bring native-feeling 4K within reach, which is the GPU tier the game's premium picks live at. Pair this panel with one of those cards and you get the most complete presentation 007 First Light has to offer.

What you give up

It is the most expensive pick here by a wide margin, and 4K is genuinely GPU-bound in this game, so it pairs honestly only with an RTX 5080 or 5090 leaning on DLSS 4.5. Drive it with a mid-tier card and you spend the panel's life upscaling from a low base. QD-OLED burn-in is the standing consideration, mitigated by panel care and the warranty but real if you leave static elements on screen for long stretches. Full-screen HDR brightness trails a Mini-LED panel, so the brightest daylight scenes are less searing, though the dark-scene contrast win is the entire point in this title.

Who it's for

The 4K buyer on an RTX 5080 or 5090 who wants the best possible HDR presentation of 007 First Light's lighting and will not compromise on contrast. For a broader look at the category, our 4K 240Hz OLED monitors guide covers the alternatives at this tier.

Best 4K Value (non-OLED): ASUS ROG Strix XG32UCG

ASUS ROG Strix 32” 4K HDR Gaming Monitor (XG32UCG) – 3840x2160, Dual Mode (4K 160Hz/FHD 320Hz), 0.3ms, Fast IPS, Extreme Low Motion Blur Sync, USB-C, G-SYNC Compatible, Tripod Socket, 3 yr Warranty
ASUS ROG Strix 32” 4K HDR Gaming Monitor (XG32UCG) – 3840x2160, Dual Mode (4K 160Hz/FHD 320Hz), 0.3ms, Fast IPS, Extreme Low Motion Blur Sync, USB-C, G-SYNC Compatible, Tripod Socket, 3 yr Warranty
$599.00

Specs

  • Size

    32 inch

  • Resolution

    3840 x 2160 (4K UHD)

  • Refresh

    160 Hz (Dual Mode: FHD 320 Hz)

  • Panel

    Fast IPS

  • Response

    0.3 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort, USB-C

What it does well

4K at 32 inches gives the game's environments detail the 1440p picks cannot, and the Fast IPS panel holds a 0.3ms response that keeps traversal crisp. The Dual Mode switch is the clever part: drop it to 1080p at 320Hz for a competitive esports night, then back to 4K 160Hz for cinematic 007 First Light, all on one screen. G-Sync Compatible smooths the frame-pacing, USB-C keeps the desk to a single cable, and the three-year warranty backs it. It pairs naturally with an RTX 5080 running 4K with DLSS 4.5, and there is no burn-in to manage.

For the buyer who wants 4K resolution more than 4K contrast, this is the sensible step down from the OLED. The map looks sharp, the response is genuinely fast, and the panel will outlast worries about static elements.

What you give up

The IPS HDR is edge-lit, so the dark embassy corridors and night infiltration keep the gray lift the OLED picks eliminate, which is the exact thing 007 First Light shows off. 4K asks a lot of the GPU, so it leans on DLSS 4.5 even on an RTX 5080 and is not a panel for a mid-tier card. And 160Hz, while plenty for a single-player stealth game, sits below the 240Hz the OLED and ultrawide picks reach at higher resolutions.

Who it's for

The 4K buyer on an RTX 5080 class card who wants map detail plus a genuine 1080p high-refresh mode for competitive sessions, prefers the IPS price and longevity over an OLED, and does not want to manage burn-in.

Best Ultrawide (Immersion): Alienware AW3425DW

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

  • Size

    34.2 inch (21:9 curved)

  • Resolution

    3440 x 1440 (WQHD ultrawide)

  • Refresh

    240 Hz

  • Panel

    QD-OLED (1800R curve)

  • Response

    0.03 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR TrueBlack 400

  • Sync

    FreeSync Premium Pro, VESA AdaptiveSync

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort, USB

What it does well

A curved QD-OLED ultrawide is the most cinematic way to play a stealth game built on framing and atmosphere. The 1800R curve and 21:9 canvas wrap the embassy interiors and city set-pieces around your peripheral vision, and the per-pixel QD-OLED contrast holds true blacks in the dark scenes exactly like the top pick. 007 First Light is a film-grade single-player game, and this is the panel that leans into that.

At 3440 x 1440 it sits between 1440p and 4K in GPU demand, so an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT feeds it well with DLSS 4.5 or FSR 4 doing real work, and 240Hz with a 0.03ms response keeps motion clean. TrueBlack HDR 400 makes the night lighting and muzzle flashes pop against the dark, which is the moment-to-moment look the game is built around.

What you give up

Confirm native 21:9 support and cutscene behavior in the build you own. Reports suggest some single-player titles fill the canvas during gameplay but pillarbox their cinematics, so check before you count on a fully widescreen experience throughout. The extra horizontal pixels ask more of the GPU than a flat 1440p panel, so pair it with an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT at minimum. QD-OLED burn-in is the standing consideration, managed by panel care and the warranty, and the curve, while immersive for gaming, is a matter of taste for desktop work.

Who it's for

The immersion-first player on an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT class card who wants 007 First Light's cinematic set-pieces wrapped around them with OLED contrast, and values presence over flat-panel pixel-perfect geometry.

Bottom line

If you want the best way to experience 007 First Light's dark, cinematic scenes at a sane price, buy the Alienware AW2725DF and let its QD-OLED blacks do the work. If contrast is not the priority and you want the right resolution for less, the LG UltraGear 27GS75Q-B is the IPS value pick. If you run an RTX 5080 or 5090 and want the showcase, step up to the MSI MPG 321URX for 4K OLED, or the ASUS ROG Strix XG32UCG if you want 4K detail without the OLED premium. And if immersion is the whole point, the Alienware AW3425DW wraps the game around you with the same per-pixel contrast as the top pick.

FAQ

What is the best monitor for 007 First Light?

The Alienware AW2725DF, a 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED, is the top pick. 007 First Light is a dark, cinematic stealth game, and an OLED's per-pixel black control is what keeps shadow detail visible in the embassy corridors and night infiltration where the game spends most of its time. 1440p is also the resolution the game's recommended cards feed at high refresh, so it pairs cleanly with an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT.

Is an OLED monitor worth it for 007 First Light?

Yes, more than in most games. The whole experience leans on dark scenes, and an OLED turns each pixel fully off for true black, so you see into the shadows instead of the gray haze an edge-lit IPS shows. Three of the five picks here are OLED for that reason. If your budget or GPU does not stretch to one, the IPS picks still run the game well and look excellent in daylight; you just lose the dark-scene contrast that defines the title.

Is 1440p or 4K better for 007 First Light?

1440p is the mainstream sweet spot where an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT feeds high refresh comfortably, which is why the top pick sits there. 4K is the showcase resolution the spec sheet names, gorgeous on a 32-inch OLED, but demanding even with DLSS 4.5; treat it as an RTX 5080 or 5090 conversation, not a mid-range one.

What refresh rate do I need for 007 First Light?

Less than the spec sheets push. This is a single-player stealth game, not an esports title, so anything from 120Hz up feels smooth. The 240Hz and 360Hz on the OLED picks are headroom and a bonus for whatever else you play. DLSS 4.5 multi-frame generation can push toward those ceilings, but treat it as a smoothness multiplier on an already-playable frame rate, not a target you must hit.

Does 007 First Light support HDR, and how should I set it up on an OLED?

Yes, and the lighting model is built for it. On an OLED, set the game to HGiG rather than dynamic tone mapping, calibrate the system HDR toward deep blacks, and turn Film Grain off. Film grain adds noise into dark areas and undermines the exact black depth an OLED delivers, so disabling it is the single biggest setup win for this game's night scenes.

Does 007 First Light support ultrawide monitors?

Check the shipping build before counting on it. Many single-player titles fill a 21:9 canvas during gameplay but pillarbox their cinematics, and behavior varies by patch. If full ultrawide support is confirmed in your version, the Alienware AW3425DW is the immersion pick, wrapping the game's set-pieces around your peripheral vision with the same OLED contrast as the top pick.

Affiliate Disclosure: We may earn commissions from purchases made through our links.