Best Gaming Monitors for Forza Horizon 6 (2026): By Tier

Best Gaming Monitors for Forza Horizon 6 (2026): By Tier

By · FounderPublished Jun 15, 2026

Forza Horizon 6 cares more about your monitor than most racers do. It ships day-one ultrawide support, runs the full upscaling stack of DLSS 4.5, FSR 4.1, and XeSS 2.1, and leans on an HDR lighting model where the Festival's night driving and headlight bloom genuinely change how a panel feels. Peripheral vision matters when sixty-plus AI cars share the road, and refresh rate matters when you are threading traffic at speed.

So the right panel follows your resolution and your GPU, not a price tag. The five picks below ladder by tier, the same tiers our GPU guide uses, so a card buyer finds the matching screen here.

Our top pick: LG UltraGear 27GS75Q-B

The LG 27GS75Q-B is the panel most Forza Horizon 6 buyers should land on: a 27-inch 1440p IPS at 180Hz that an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT feeds cleanly with DLSS 4 or FSR 4.1 and ray tracing on.

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
$189.99

Quick picks

Quick picks for Forza Horizon 6 monitors

Specs at a glance

  • Size

    23.8 inch

    Resolution

    1920 x 1080

    Refresh

    180Hz

    Panel

    IPS

    HDR / Sync

    HDR10, G-Sync Compatible

  • Size

    27 inch

    Resolution

    2560 x 1440

    Refresh

    180Hz (O/C 200Hz)

    Panel

    IPS

    HDR / Sync

    HDR10, G-Sync Compatible

  • Size

    34 inch 21:9

    Resolution

    3440 x 1440

    Refresh

    240Hz

    Panel

    Curved VA

    HDR / Sync

    DisplayHDR 400, FreeSync Premium

  • Size

    32 inch

    Resolution

    3840 x 2160

    Refresh

    160Hz (Dual 320Hz)

    Panel

    Fast IPS

    HDR / Sync

    HDR, G-Sync Compatible

  • Size

    32 inch

    Resolution

    3840 x 2160

    Refresh

    240Hz

    Panel

    QD-OLED

    HDR / Sync

    True Black 400, G-Sync Compatible

Specs at a glance

How we picked

Forza Horizon 6 hands you the same buying question every time: which screen are you sitting in front of. Resolution sets the floor, refresh rate sets the ceiling, and your GPU decides whether you reach it. Four questions cover it. What resolution do you want to run, how much refresh do you care about, does 21:9 immersion appeal to you, and is the Festival's HDR lighting worth stepping up to an OLED.

Each pick below answers one of those and pairs to a GPU tier from our Forza Horizon 6 GPU guide. The 1080p panel pairs with an RX 9060 XT class card, the 1440p picks pair with an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT, and the 4K picks step up to the RTX 5080 and 5090. If you are still finalizing the rest of the build, the Forza Horizon 6 CPU guide covers the processor side.

One reality check on refresh. FH6 leans on upscaling at every tier above 1080p, so a 240Hz panel only delivers 240 frames when DLSS 4 or FSR 4.1 is doing real work, often with Frame Generation layered on. Native 1440p Ultra with ray tracing on does not clear 200 frames on a 5070; the upscaler is load-bearing, not optional. Match the panel to what your card and upscaler really produce, and the spec sheet stops fighting you.

Best 1080p Entry: LG UltraGear 24GS65F-B

LG 24GS65F-B 24-inch Ultragear Full HD (1920 x 1080) IPS Gaming Monitor, 180Hz, 1ms, NVIDIA G-Sync Compatible, AMD FreeSync, HDR10, HDMI, DisplayPort, Tilt/Height/Pivot Adjustable Stand, Black
LG 24GS65F-B 24-inch Ultragear Full HD (1920 x 1080) IPS Gaming Monitor, 180Hz, 1ms, NVIDIA G-Sync Compatible, AMD FreeSync, HDR10, HDMI, DisplayPort, Tilt/Height/Pivot Adjustable Stand, Black
$202.53

Specs

  • Size

    23.8 inch

  • Resolution

    1920 x 1080 (FHD)

  • Refresh

    180 Hz

  • Panel

    IPS

  • Response

    1 ms (GtG)

  • HDR

    HDR10

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible, FreeSync

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort

Specs

What it does well

This is the cheapest clean way into high-refresh Forza Horizon 6. The 180Hz IPS panel keeps open-road traversal smooth and holds up when the road fills with AI traffic, where a budget VA panel would start smearing on the fast-moving cars. IPS color does the saturated Festival palette justice, and HDR10 adds a modest lift in the bright daytime sections. G-Sync Compatible and FreeSync both work, so frame-pacing dips during weather events and dense packs of cars get smoothed whether you run an NVIDIA or AMD card. The full tilt, height, and pivot stand is unusual at this tier and means you skip the monitor-arm purchase.

Paired with an RX 9060 XT 16GB running 1080p Ultra with ray tracing and FSR 4.1, this panel sits right at the GPU's comfort zone. The card feeds the frames, the screen displays them, and nothing in the chain is straining.

What you give up

1080p is the trade. On a 23.8-inch panel the pixel density is fine at a normal desk distance, but you forgo the map detail a 1440p or 4K screen shows on distant scenery and crowd-lined streets. The HDR10 here is entry-level and edge-lit, so night driving will not have the headlight pop an OLED delivers. And 180Hz, while plenty for FH6, sits below the 240Hz ceiling the ultrawide and OLED picks reach.

Who it's for

The buyer pairing a 1080p high-refresh build, an RX 9060 XT 16GB or RTX 5060 class card, who wants smooth Forza Horizon 6 traversal without spending the GPU's budget on the panel. A clean first high-refresh monitor.

Best 1440p Sweet Spot: 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
$189.99

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

Specs

What it does well

1440p at 27 inches is the resolution-to-size sweet spot, sharp enough to render the map detail Forza Horizon 6 throws at you without demanding a 4K-class GPU. The panel runs 180Hz and overclocks to 200Hz, a ceiling an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT reaches at 1440p once DLSS 4 or FSR 4.1 is active and ray tracing is on. IPS keeps the Festival palette accurate and the viewing angles wide, which matters if you sit close to a 27-inch screen. G-Sync Compatible and FreeSync both smooth the frame-pacing, and the full ergonomic stand makes it an easy daily driver well beyond the game.

This is the panel the largest share of FH6 buyers should own. It matches the most common GPU tier in the game's audience and asks nothing exotic of the rest of the build.

What you give up

It is an IPS panel, so the HDR is edge-lit rather than per-pixel, and the night-driving contrast trails the OLED pick. There is no ultrawide immersion here, just a flat 16:9 screen. And the 200Hz overclock is a ceiling you reach in FH6 only with upscaling and Frame Generation pulling weight, not at native 1440p Ultra, where the frame rate lands comfortably high but short of 200.

Who it's for

The largest group of Forza Horizon 6 buyers: anyone on an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT class card who wants a 27-inch 1440p panel that feeds high refresh with ray tracing on. If you are matching the monitor to one of those cards specifically, the best monitors for the RTX 5070 guide goes deeper on that pairing. This is the default recommendation.

Best Ultrawide: LG UltraGear 34G630A-B

LG 34G630A-B 34-Inch Ultragear WQHD (3440 x 1440) Curved Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, 1ms, FreeSync Premium, DisplayHDR 400, Built-in Speaker, HDMI, DisplayPort, USB Type-C, Tilt/Height/Swivel Stand, Black
LG 34G630A-B 34-Inch Ultragear WQHD (3440 x 1440) Curved Gaming Monitor, 240Hz, 1ms, FreeSync Premium, DisplayHDR 400, Built-in Speaker, HDMI, DisplayPort, USB Type-C, Tilt/Height/Swivel Stand, Black
$360.49$499.99

Specs

  • Size

    34 inch (21:9 curved)

  • Resolution

    3440 x 1440 (WQHD ultrawide)

  • Refresh

    240 Hz

  • Panel

    VA (curved)

  • Response

    1 ms

  • HDR

    DisplayHDR 400

  • Sync

    FreeSync Premium

  • Ports

    HDMI, DisplayPort, USB Type-C

Specs

What it does well

Forza Horizon 6 supports 21:9 out of the box, and an ultrawide is where the game's sense of speed and place comes alive. The 3440 x 1440 canvas widens your peripheral view, so corner entry and oncoming traffic register sooner than they do on a 16:9 panel. In a game built around fast open-world driving, that extra horizontal awareness is a real handling advantage, not just eye candy. The 1500R curve wraps the Festival map around you, and the VA panel's deep contrast suits night sections and tunnels where black levels matter. At 240Hz the traversal is glass-smooth when your GPU can feed it, the single USB-C cable carries video plus peripherals, and FreeSync Premium smooths the pacing through weather and traffic.

What you give up

This is a VA panel, so off-axis viewing and pixel response trail the IPS picks, and fast dark-to-light transitions can show mild smearing. Reports from buyers suggest VA's response is the main compromise against the immersion it buys. The 240Hz at 3440 x 1440 is genuinely GPU-bound in FH6, so you lean on FSR 4.1 or DLSS to approach it. Ultrawide also asks more of your card than a flat 1440p panel because there are simply more pixels to push, so pair it with an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT at minimum, not an entry card.

Who it's for

The immersion-first Forza Horizon 6 player on an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT class card who wants the wraparound 21:9 view and deep VA contrast for night driving, and values presence over the last word in pixel response. If you run a wheel setup, the wider field of view pairs naturally with our Forza Horizon 6 racing wheel picks.

Best 4K: 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

Specs

What it does well

4K at 32 inches renders the Forza Horizon 6 map and its distant scenery with a level of detail the 1440p picks cannot match, and the Fast IPS panel holds a 0.3ms response that keeps high-speed 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 FH6, 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, which drives 4K Forza Horizon 6 with DLSS 4 Performance doing the heavy lifting.

What you give up

4K asks a lot of the GPU. FH6 at 4K Ultra with ray tracing on leans hard on DLSS or FSR even on an RTX 5080, and this is not a panel for a mid-tier card that will spend its life upscaling from a low base. The IPS HDR is edge-lit, so contrast and black levels trail the OLED pick below it. And 160Hz, while plenty for a single-player racer, sits under the 240Hz the ultrawide and OLED reach.

Who it's for

The 4K-resolution buyer on an RTX 5080 class card who wants full map detail plus a genuine 1080p high-refresh mode for competitive sessions, and prefers the IPS price and longevity over an OLED's premium and burn-in considerations.

Best 4K OLED: ASUS ROG Swift PG32UCDM

ASUS ROG Swift 32” 4K OLED Gaming Monitor (PG32UCDM) - UHD (3840 x 2160), QD-OLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, Custom Heatsink, Graphene Film, 99% DCI-P3, True 10-bit, 90W USB-C
ASUS ROG Swift 32” 4K OLED Gaming Monitor (PG32UCDM) - UHD (3840 x 2160), QD-OLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, Custom Heatsink, Graphene Film, 99% DCI-P3, True 10-bit, 90W USB-C
$849.00$1,299.00

Specs

  • Size

    32 inch

  • Resolution

    3840 x 2160 (4K UHD)

  • Refresh

    240 Hz

  • Panel

    QD-OLED

  • Response

    0.03 ms (GtG)

  • Color

    99% DCI-P3, True 10-bit

  • Sync

    G-Sync Compatible

  • Ports

    HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort, 90W USB-C

Specs

What it does well

This is the flagship. Forza Horizon 6's lighting is built for HDR, and a QD-OLED's per-pixel control is what makes the Festival's night driving, neon signage, and headlight bloom render with true blacks and the kind of pop no edge-lit IPS can reach. At 4K and 240Hz with a 0.03ms response, motion is effectively instant, and 99% DCI-P3 with True 10-bit color lets the map's saturated palette sing. G-Sync Compatible smooths the pacing, HDMI 2.1 covers console pairing if you also run FH6 on a Series X, and the 90W USB-C handles a single-cable laptop setup. On an RTX 5090 this is the most complete way to experience the game.

If you want the same OLED contrast at 1440p instead of 4K, our 1440p OLED monitor guide covers that step down.

What you give up

This is the premium tier, and 4K at 240Hz is genuinely GPU-bound. Only an RTX 5090 feeds it comfortably, and even then DLSS 4 and Frame Generation do real work to approach 240 frames. QD-OLED carries the usual burn-in consideration; buyers report that 2026 panel-care firmware and the warranty have made it far less of a worry than it was a few years ago, but it is worth respecting if you leave static HUDs on screen for long stretches outside the game. It is also the most expensive pick here by a wide margin.

Who it's for

The flagship Forza Horizon 6 buyer on an RTX 5090 who wants the best possible HDR presentation of the Festival's lighting and will not compromise on contrast, color, or refresh.

Bottom line

If you are building a 1080p high-refresh rig around an RX 9060 XT, buy the LG UltraGear 24GS65F-B and put the savings into the GPU. If you run an RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT, the LG UltraGear 27GS75Q-B is the sweet-spot 1440p panel and the pick most Forza Horizon 6 buyers should make. If immersion is the priority and you have a 5070 Ti or 9070 XT to feed it, the LG UltraGear 34G630A-B's 21:9 curve changes how the game feels. Step up to the ASUS ROG Strix XG32UCG for 4K detail on an RTX 5080, or the ASUS ROG Swift PG32UCDM if you have a 5090 and want the Festival's HDR lighting at its absolute best.

FAQ

Does Forza Horizon 6 support ultrawide monitors?

Yes. Forza Horizon 6 ships day-one support for 21:9 ultrawide resolutions like 3440 x 1440. The wider field of view is more than cosmetic in a racing game: it widens your peripheral awareness, so oncoming traffic and corner-entry lines register sooner than they do on a standard 16:9 panel. The LG UltraGear 34G630A-B is the ultrawide pick here for exactly that reason.

What refresh rate do I need for Forza Horizon 6?

144Hz is the comfortable floor for FH6's open-world traversal and its dense AI traffic. 240Hz pays off only when your GPU and upscaler can actually feed those frames, which a 1440p panel can manage on an RTX 5070 Ti or RX 9070 XT with DLSS 4 or FSR 4.1 doing real work. Below that, a 180Hz panel like the sweet-spot pick is plenty.

Is 1440p or 4K better for Forza Horizon 6?

1440p is the mainstream sweet spot where the whole 50-series and RDNA 4 stack feeds high refresh with ray tracing on, which is why it is the top pick. 4K is gorgeous on the Festival map but demanding even with upscaling; treat it as an RTX 5080 or 5090 conversation, not a mid-range one.

Does Forza Horizon 6 support HDR, and is an OLED worth it?

FH6's lighting model is built for HDR, and it shows most at night and around the Festival's neon. An OLED's per-pixel light control makes that lighting pop in a way edge-lit IPS HDR cannot match, which is why the premium pick is a QD-OLED. If your budget or GPU does not stretch to 4K OLED, the IPS picks still accept the HDR signal and look excellent in daylight scenes.

Will my RTX 5070 or RX 9070 XT bottleneck a 240Hz monitor in FH6?

At native 1440p Ultra, yes, you will land well under 240 frames. With DLSS 4 or FSR 4.1 active the 5070 Ti and 9070 XT comfortably feed the 144 to 200 range, and Frame Generation extends that further. A 180Hz panel matches those cards more honestly than a 240Hz one unless you commit to upscaling.

Do I need G-Sync or FreeSync for Forza Horizon 6?

Variable refresh smooths the frame-pacing dips that show up during weather events and dense traffic, so it is worth having. Every pick here is G-Sync Compatible or FreeSync Premium, so you are covered on either an NVIDIA or AMD card without hunting for a specific badge.

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