If you want more screen real estate without jumping to an ultrawide, this is the move. At 32 inches, you get noticeably more room than the standard 27-inch size — two browser windows side by side, or enough space in games that you're not constantly panning the camera to see things. The picture is sharper than 1080p but not as dense as 4K, which is the sweet spot for gaming because your graphics card doesn't have to work as hard.
The screen refreshes 165 times per second, so motion looks smooth in fast games, and pixels respond fast enough that you won't see blurry trails when things move quickly. Colors look natural out of the box — it's the same IPS panel tech you'd find in good work monitors, just tuned for gaming speeds.
The HDR label here is the weak kind that doesn't actually make bright things pop, so treat it like a regular bright screen and you won't be disappointed. Two HDMI 2.1 ports mean it plays nice with current-gen consoles.