The 144Hz IPS era is over: why 240Hz OLED is the only monitor you should buy

I remember unboxing my first 144Hz IPS panel five years ago and thinking we had peaked. I was wrong. After spending the last month staring at the latest crop of 240Hz OLEDs, going back to a standard backlit LCD feels like looking at a game through a screen door.

Quick links

AOC – 27” QD-OLED Gaming Monitor (~$400)

LG – UltraGear 32″ Dual Mode OLED (~$1,000)

Samsung – 49″ Odyssey OLED G9 (G93SD) (~$1,000)

The new visual baseline

We have officially crossed the threshold where “perfect pixels” are no longer just for the rich enthusiast. The 2025/2026 panel price crash has democratized self-emissive technology, meaning you no longer have to choose between speed (Hz) and picture quality (HDR).

The new standard is simple: 240Hz refresh rates paired with 0.03ms response times.Valorant or soaking in the neon lights of Cyberpunk, OLED is no longer a luxury upgrade—it is the baseline for anyone serious about PC gaming.

The hardware drop

AOC – 27” QD-OLED Gaming Monitor (~$400)

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This is, without hyperbole, the most aggressive pricing I have seen on a QD-OLED panel. AOC has managed to deliver the vibrant, saturated colors of Quantum Dot technology which usually carries a premium over standard OLED, for $400. At 240Hz with a 0.03ms response time, it is faster than your reflexes, and the QHD resolution hits the sweet spot for hitting high frames without needing an RTX 5090.

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LG – UltraGear 32″ Dual Mode OLED (~$1,000)

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This monitor solves the “resolution vs. refresh rate” dilemma by giving you both. With the press of a button, it switches from a crisp 4K 240Hz mode (perfect for RPGs) to a blistering FHD 480Hz mode (for competitive shooters). It effectively gives you two flagship monitors in one chassis, complete with LG’s matte coating that handles daylight glare better than its glossy competitors.

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Samsung – 49″ Odyssey OLED G9 (G93SD) (~$1,000)

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This G93SD model is actually the superior version of the famous 49-inch super-ultrawide because it strips out the bloat. Unlike the G95SC, this version lacks the sluggish “Smart Hub” TV interface, meaning it boots up instantly and functions purely as a monitor. You get the same wrap-around immersion and 240Hz speed, but without the headache of a Tizen OS menu popping up when you just want to game.

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The bottom line

The debate is settled: if you are building or upgrading a PC in 2026, an LCD panel shouldn’t even be on your list. Whether you grab the AOC 27″ for unmatched value or the LG Dual Mode for versatility, the jump to 240Hz OLED is the single biggest visual upgrade you can make right now.

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