Experience unparalleled gaming realism with the REALITY-BENDING IMMERSION monitor, featuring a cutting-edge 1000R curvature that mirrors the natural arc of the human eye. This innovative design surrounds players in stunning environments, delivering deeper immersion and enhancing gameplay satisfaction.
Achieve world-class performance with the industry’s first 4K gaming monitor that boasts a lightning-fast 240Hz refresh rate and an impressive 1ms (GTG) response time. Whether you’re racing against time or engaging in intense battles, every millisecond counts, giving you a competitive edge to top those leaderboards.
Harness the power of QUANTUM MATRIX TECHNOLOGY for an unrivaled visual experience. Revolutionary Quantum Mini LEDs provide enhanced control over brightness and contrast, ensuring impeccable definition in every frame. Push your visuals even further with HDR2000, delivering a peak brightness of 2,000 nits and a staggering 1,000,000:1 contrast ratio for rich color expression and incredible depth across a variety of scenes.
The UHD resolution coupled with a speedy 240Hz refresh rate positions the G85NB as a CES 2022 Best of Innovation recipient, continually redefining the boundaries of monitor capabilities. Enjoy seamless gameplay with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, synchronizing your graphics card with the monitor to eliminate choppiness, screen lag, and image tears.
Stay focused on the action with a matte display that reduces reflections, allowing you to absorb every detail without distractions. With a versatile mounting option (100 x 100mm), this 32-inch screen is designed for dynamic setups whether mounted on the wall or on a desk.
Experience the future of gaming with the Samsung G85NB, where speed, immersion, and visual excellence come together to create the ultimate gaming environment. Unleash your potential and elevate your gameplay—because in every battle, the right tools can make all the difference.
Aethermath –
I was first looking for a computer monitor to use my gaming consoles on them. Why a monitor? Because I didn’t care about the image processing or the advanced smart features of a full fledged television. I know Samsung generally make good products and I knew I was buying something good. Sure, some reviews state that there are better screens with more features out there, but I like the fact that the picture quality on this one is pretty close to the OLED, without the huge price tag. Overall, I am pretty satisfied with the aesthetic of the screen (love the sci-fi look with the white logo behind it), the picture quality is great, the smart features are enough without being intrusive and I am happy about this purchase. The size surprised me a bit, it’s roughly the same size as a full sized poster on a wall, that is 24 by 36 inches. The material doesn’t feel cheap and is light enough, I love the contrast and brightness and in spite of some claims, there is a RGB light at the bottom, it’s two small LED lights that can react to the content being shown on the screen, you just need to enable it manually. So far, it detects my Switch being turned on and my Xbox Series X and can also swap between them if needed. The setup with the SmartThings App was okay, I had a few glitches but it was easier than to manually input everything. The speaker is kinda weak but it works well enough for a small room. The remote is kinda small and feel robust enough, but I would be careful with it. I see this as a kind of hybrid between a smart tv and a computer monitor. I haven’t use my MacBook with it, but I tried to Airplay with my iPhone and it works pretty well. I can’t speak to the reported ghosting or input lag while using it as a computer monitor, so far. I would say it’s a pretty solid buy if you read about its specs first. I know OLED is the best of the best in term of picture quality, but mini-led is great for me, it reminds me of the 12.9 inches iPad Pro XDR display that also use mini-leds. One of the reason I chose this one over the other options is the included speaker, cause I don’t intend to use a dedicated one yet and I didn’t want to game exclusively using a headset. The 43 inches Samsung Odyssey NEO G7 is a great screen. Don’t be shy, it’s a good buy!
Keith Ian Wolman –
Me encanta este monitor. Es brillante, es colorido, no tengo reflejos en una oficina / sala de juegos con ventanas muy brillantes. El contraste es excelente para una pantalla LCD. Gran volumen de color. Sin retraso de entrada. Estaba preocupado por la curva extrema, pero me encanta. A pesar de las críticas que decían que me molestaría usarlo para el trabajo, no he tenido ningún problema con la curva de pantalla para ese propósito en absoluto. No he tenido problemas de conectividad. Estoy en el último firmware. En realidad, me sorprendió que se enviara con el último firmware para mí.
Supongo que lo único negativo es el soporte tambaleante y barato y los controles de pantalla donde deberían haber utilizado un joystick. No he tenido problemas con los escáneres ni nada por el estilo. Recomiendo encarecidamente este monitor.
caleb me –
After considering OLED for a while and waiting for the price to drop, I finally decided to try this when on sale. I had very high expectations and was fully prepared to refund at the first sign of trouble.
Lets start with the cons in my experience.
1. After setting up the monitor and looking through the settings, trying to turn the RGB LEDs on worked… for the most part. The lights on the back worked fine, on the front there are two zones that are supposed to light up also, but only one of them worked. After doing some searching apparently a simple firmware update or downgrade can fix this, so it is not a hardware issue but a software one. I do not need LEDs on a monitor anyway, especially an OLED that has those nice true blacks, so I don’t want anything on to distract my eye. I turned the LEDs off completely and never card to change firmware just to be able to turn them on again.
2. The first day I setup the monitor, tested it a bit, then went to bed. The following day I turned on the monitor and after a few hours of using it I closed all my programs and went to desktop (which is a true black single color background). To my surprise the LEDs were still on, the screen looked no different from my other non OLED screens. After digging through various settings and power cycling the monitor a few times I decided to contact support. I explained my issue and got transfer once or twice through Samsung support chat before finally getting through to help. The first thing that I was asked to do was unplug the power cord that runs from the adapter box to the monitor, not from the wall to the adapter box, and not power cycling using the button on the monitor. After waiting about a minute and plugging it back in the black were true black again and I felt like an idiot. The important takeaway here is that the box will run some power to the screen even if the screen is of, so if you need to power cycle make sure you unplug the screen. After doing the reset once my pixels have remained true black where they should and have not been an issue since.
Before we get to the pros is want to mention settings. There are quite a few settings of which most are helpful, just about anything you would want to change you can. The only problem is that with so many settings it can be hard to find what you’re looking for sometimes. So far this is one of my only monitors to not change settings ever after setup, I have had ASUS and ACER monitors before that both will occasionally change a setting if a certain game launches or if the hdmi/vda/dp gets unplugged.
Finally we have the pros.
1. OLED monitor at a PC desktop form factor. This thing looks great, it is great to watch movies and videos on, and colorful and cinematic games look amazing, I have never seen a non OLED come anywhere close it is not even the same ballgame. I have had TN VA and IPS displays before and IMO all three of those look far more similar to each other than to this.
2. Responsiveness and Refresh rate. 240hz is incredibly solid for modern gaming, not as bug of jump from 60 to 144 or even 120, but still noticeable. Due to the OLED tech the overall screen response time is insane, it isn’t as simple as the 1ms, 0.5ms or 0.1ms that you see advertised on these monitor pages, if you look into it in depth, this monitor has a response time that is about 2x faster then the next best non OLED gaming monitor, and that monitor is even 360hz! What does this meant though? Blur essentially does not exist on this monitor, comparing to 144hz, 165, and 60hz, when setting this monitors refresh rate to match, it is significantly clearer and less blurry. At 240hz even taking a still image with a high fps camera it is hard to detect or extremely minimal, where my VA 165hz displays at least 5 clearly visible ghosted images at once just with my phone camera.
To summarize, this monitor I expected to be good but not worth the price tag, but after quite some use it has completely blown me away and I am definitely keeping it. The only monitor jump that has been as noticeable as jumping from non OLED to OLED is the jump from 60-144hz.
cody sinfield –
So after selling this monitor for th Oled g8 ultrawide , Instantly regretted selling . Returned the ultrawide oled , then went to the lg 27 inch oled 240hz I did prefer this monitor to the g8 oled but overall was not bright enough and 2k resolution was very noticeable after gaming on the neo g8 4k . People were saying in reviews the monitors being oled made up for lower res , but for me that was not so . Ended up keeping the LG oled and buying the s95c 55 inch , and this is what I currently run . after trying all these I realized the Neo G8 is an amazing monitor has a bit of bloom but overall a great 4k 240hz display you can get for a good price . The s95c is great for gaming but is also over double the price so the neo g8 4k is tough to beat right now
Chris S. –
I upgraded from the 4K LG 27GN950-B UltraGear Gaming Monitor 27” UHD to this 4K Neo G8 curved monitor because of the 240Hz refresh rate and the numerous superlatives doled out to it by tech magazines and websites. I also wanted to maximize my Nvidia RTX 4090 card with one of the best rated monitors out there.
So, let’s get the worrisome part out of the way first: if you aren’t used to curved monitors (I wasn’t) then, as many reviewers noted, it will take your eyes some time to get used to the curvature and how the images actually move on screen. For me, that time period lasted about two weeks, and I was really on the fence about this monitor during that timeframe. Once acclimated though, I finally got used to the tunneling effect where the image forces your eyes to focus on the center of the screen (kind of like when you are driving at night), and processes peripheral images still very distinctly but similar to your own vision with a slight wrapping effect at the edges.
The second issue I think many new users confront is actually adjusting the image settings to get the quality you prefer rather than one that’s set as the default. For me, that means my video card can easily handle the 240Hz refresh rate (other cards may not) without screen flashing, tearing, or image ghosting, but the colors are far too saturated and actually are overwhelming on any of the presets. I had to adjust the color settings to the old sRGB standard rather than one of the presets (e.g., FPS, RPG, Cinema, etc.). The color tone is simply warmer and more natural with that sRGB setting and with the Contrast Enhancer On and the Brightness dimmed about 10%. As a first step, I recommend you adjust your own settings to your preferences and also factor an image that reduces strain on the eyes.
On that note of eye strain, I would also recommend some decent blue light glasses for extended play or viewing sessions. Just like with my aforementioned comparison with night driving, your eyes really do lock in a bit more for an immersive experience and you need to ensure you don’t overdo it, especially initially if you aren’t used to this type of monitor. Some users may notice initial motion sickness for specific games like FPSs or first-person RPGs, but I found that goes away with the right settings, some judicious gaming time limits (or blue light glasses for extended use), and the natural adjustment by your eyes to the curved display.
But, once you hit that sweet spot for settings, this monitor is excellent for picture quality and overall viewing. My old LG pales in comparison, though it still remains a good monitor. For anyone on the fence about the curved display, go to your local brick and mortar store that sells these and check them out in-person first. If you think you can adapt and you have the video card to power this monitor at the 240Hz refresh rate, then it’s an easy recommendation. If not, the Neo G7 has a flat monitor option at 144Hz that would likely be an upgrade from the LG as well. With whatever monitor you settle on, always adjust the settings to your preferences as a first step, rather than force your eyes to adjust to a default setting or otherwise unnatural image quality in terms of light intensity. warmth, or color oversaturation.
Martin C. –
I’ve had this monitor for 3 months now and I am very pleased. I really have no significant complaints. The only down side so far for me is that my video card supports a max of 120hz at 7680×2160. That’s no fault of the monitor but rather a limitation of my RTX 4080 Super. Beyond that, there are only positives. Most of my time is not spent gaming so it’s important that the monitor does well at non-gaming tasks, which is really does. Text is beautifully crisp, colors are vivid – just a pleasure to use every day. Gaming performance is excellent – best screen I’ve had to date. Just beautiful.
Overall, a monitor I can easily recommend based on my experience to date. Well worth the money.
Keith Ian Wolman –
Amazing monitor with gorgeous visuals while using the HDR. I originally ordered the monitor and it came with a one inch line of dead pixels centered from top to bottom. I was quick to talk with support to get it replaced and the new monitor arrived the next day and was perfect condition. Absolutely would recommend this monitor even after what had happened.