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LG UltraGear 34GX90SA-W 34" Curved OLED WQHD 240Hz 0.03ms G-Sync Gaming Monitor with webOS
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LG UltraGear 34GX90SA-W 34" Curved OLED WQHD 240Hz 0.03ms G-Sync Gaming Monitor with webOS

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What separates this monitor from a standard high-refresh IPS panel isn't just the OLED panel — it's the combination of a 0.03ms response time and 240Hz refresh rate on a 34-inch ultrawide curve. In practice, that means fast-moving scenes in competitive titles like Valorant or fast-paced RPGs render without the ghosting or smearing that even premium LCD alternatives struggle to eliminate. The webOS integration also means this functions as a capable standalone smart display when your PC is off — a genuine bonus for a monitor at any price point.

Who Is This For?

This is built for the serious PC gamer who spends long sessions in immersive single-player worlds or competitive multiplayer and refuses to compromise between image quality and speed. The ultrawide WQHD resolution rewards those running mid-to-high-end GPUs — an RTX 4070 or above will extract the most from 240Hz at this resolution. If you're primarily a console gamer or working with a GPU below that tier, the outlay is difficult to justify and you'd be better served by a 27-inch 1440p alternative at half the price.

What Buyers Say

Owners of LG's OLED UltraGear lineup consistently praise the contrast depth and colour vibrancy — blacks are genuinely black, which makes dark scenes in games feel cinematic rather than grey and washed out. The most repeated criticism, specific to curved OLED monitors of this type, is concern over burn-in with static UI elements, particularly health bars or minimaps in games played for many hours daily. LG includes pixel-refreshing tools, but it remains a real consideration for anyone who plays the same title obsessively.

The Deal

The current price is £899.99, down from £1,099.99 — a saving of £200. Because this product is newly tracked, there's no historical price data available to confirm whether £1,099.99 represents a genuine long-term RRP or an inflated anchor. Until we've built a price history, treat this with caution and check back before committing. For broader gaming monitor and peripheral comparisons, our best gaming deals UK guide is worth a look. A strong product, but an unverified deal — watch and wait.

Price History & Verdict

Worth Waiting

Based on our price history this is above the average price. Consider waiting for a better deal.

Current Price £1099.99
Lowest Recorded £899.99
Average Price £999.99
Original Price £1099.99

Frequently Asked Questions

The monitor carries official NVIDIA G-Sync certification, which means it is validated and optimised for NVIDIA RTX and GTX cards. However, as a G-Sync Compatible display it will also work with AMD FreeSync over DisplayPort, so AMD GPU owners can still benefit from adaptive sync — just without the full G-Sync module validation. The panel runs at up to 240Hz at its native WQHD (3440x1440) resolution via DisplayPort 1.4 or HDMI 2.1.

This monitor is best suited to competitive gamers who want the contrast and pixel response of OLED — particularly for fast-paced titles where the 0.03ms response and 240Hz refresh rate give a tangible edge — alongside the extra horizontal space of a 34-inch ultrawide for immersive single-player games. The webOS smart platform is a genuine bonus if you want to stream without a PC connected. The honest limitation is OLED burn-in risk: static HUD elements in heavily played titles can cause permanent image retention over time, and LG's pixel-refresh tools only mitigate rather than eliminate this concern.

This product has only just been tracked, so there is no historical price data to confirm whether £899.99 represents a floor or a typical promotional price. The stated saving of £200 off an RRP of £1,099.99 is plausible for a curved OLED gaming monitor at this specification level, but without a price history it cannot be verified as a genuine low. Treat the current price as potentially worthwhile if you need the monitor now, but set a price alert so you can see how it behaves over the coming weeks.

The Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 34-inch is the most direct rival, also offering a curved 34-inch OLED panel at WQHD resolution, and the two are closely matched on core specs. The LG edges ahead with a higher 240Hz refresh rate versus Samsung's 175Hz, and adds webOS for standalone smart TV functionality — a practical advantage if the monitor doubles as a living room screen. The Samsung counters with a slightly wider colour gamut certification and a more established UK retail presence, which can mean better warranty service support in practice.