This is a monster screen. At 39 inches wide with a deep curve that wraps around you, it fills your peripheral vision the way sitting close to a theater screen does. Games feel less like looking at a window and more like being inside the scene — especially in open-world titles or racing sims where the extra width matters.
The OLED panel gives you true blacks and instant pixel response, so dark scenes look inky instead of washed out and fast motion stays sharp without blur trails. It refreshes 240 times per second, which is overkill for most people but means buttery-smooth gameplay if your PC can push the frames. The screen is about as wide as two regular monitors side by side, but without a bezel in the middle breaking things up.
The ultrawide shape means you're fitting more horizontal space than vertical — great for games and movies shot wide, awkward for stacking browser tabs or reading long documents. And like all OLEDs, static UI elements can eventually burn in if you leave the same thing on screen for years.