According to this Digitec Galaxus listing, the monitor will cost 2,500 euro and will launch between September 14 and September 28. This time, an Austrian retailer revealed the European pricing of the monitor alongside an approximate release date. ![]() ![]() Of course, the official channels are one thing, but the rumor mill is another. It’s still a bit of a weird move to gather interest for a product that doesn’t have an official price. There’s no certain release date either, but Samsung is offering $50 off if you sign up within the next 5 days, so the launch date might not be too far off. But … how much does this thing cost?Īlthough you can sign up right now to reserve the new monitor, Samsung doesn’t disclose how much it’s going to cost, so you’re going in blind. If you like curved gaming monitors and playing on a massive screen, this is the way to go, and the visuals are likely to be pretty amazing. Unlike the aforementioned Odyssey Neo G9, this monitor uses DisplayPort 1.4, which actually makes it more likely to succeed as the DisplayPort 2.1 used by the Neo G9 is unavailable to most graphics cards (aside from AMD’s RX 7900 XTX).Īll of this sounds peachy. It’s VESA DisplayHDR True Black 400 certified, meaning a full area brightness of 250 nits and 400 nits peak brightness.Ĭonnectivity options include an HDMI 2.1 port, a micro-HDMI 2.1 port, and two USB Type-A. It has a dual 1440p QD-OLED panel and a refresh rate of 240Hz, offering a resolution of 5120 x 1440. ![]() Samsung’s CES 2023 gaming monitors range from curved QD-OLEDs to 8K behemothsĪlthough the exact specifications are difficult to come by, it’s pretty much confirmed that this is a 49-inch curved monitor with a 1800R curvature. Samsung’s first flat mini-LED gaming monitor doesn’t come cheap
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