LG UltraGear LG UltraGear 39 inch Ultrawide WQHD 2K 1440P 240Hz Review

The LG Ultragear 39GX900A-B wraps you in a 39-inch OLED screen with a curve so steep you'll feel inside the game. But is this immersive monster too specialized for its own good?

Screen Size 39
Resolution 3440 x 1440
Panel Type OLED
Refresh Rate 240
Adaptive Sync G-Sync Compatible
Hdr HDR10
LG UltraGear LG UltraGear 39 inch Ultrawide WQHD 2K 1440P 240Hz monitor
87.1 Загальна оцінка

The 30-Second Version

This is the monitor you buy when you want to feel inside the game, not just watch it. The aggressive 800R curve and OLED speed create an immersive experience that flat screens can't touch, but it's a one-trick pony for dedicated gamers.

Overview

The LG Ultragear 39GX900A-B is a monitor that makes a promise and keeps it: it's an OLED speed demon wrapped in a curve so aggressive you'll feel like you're falling into the screen. Forget subtlety. This 39-inch, 240Hz, WQHD panel is built for one thing: to make your games feel faster and look more immersive than anything else on your desk. The one thing to know? It's not a jack-of-all-trades. It's a master of gaming immersion, and it makes zero apologies for it.

Performance

What surprised us was how that 800R curve actually works. In our data, ergonomics scored low, but the performance percentile is sky-high at 83rd. That's because the curve isn't just for show. It pulls your peripheral vision into the game, making fast-paced shooters and racing sims feel more intense. Combined with the near-instant 0.03ms pixel response of OLED, the whole experience feels incredibly fluid. The 240Hz refresh rate is the cherry on top, ensuring everything stays buttery smooth.

Performance Percentiles

Color 88.4
Portability 41.7
Display 88.4
Feature 97.6
Ergonomic 88.3
Performance 80.6
Connectivity 94.8
Social Proof 67.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The 800R curve is a game-changer for immersion, making you feel inside the action. 98th
  • OLED pixel response is flawless. Ghosting and smearing are simply non-existent. 95th
  • 240Hz refresh rate delivers ultra-smooth gameplay that feels incredibly responsive. 88th
  • Image quality is stunning, with inky blacks and vibrant HDR highlights. 88th

Cons

  • The curve is extreme. If you do serious photo editing or spreadsheet work, look elsewhere.
  • It's a massive, heavy beast. Desk real estate and a sturdy stand are mandatory.
  • Connectivity is just okay for the price, landing in the 34th percentile in our rankings.
  • WQHD resolution on a 39-inch screen isn't super sharp. You're trading pixel density for immersion.

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (15 reviews)
👍 Multiple users are blown away by the immersion, calling the 39-inch size with the steep curve the perfect sweet spot for a desk.
👍 People switching from multi-monitor setups or basic office screens report the upgrade in clarity and fluidity is 'unbelievable.'
🤔 The extreme curve is a major point of debate; some find it perfectly fine for all-day work, while others clearly think it's only for gaming.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 39"
Resolution 3440 x 1440
Panel Type OLED
Aspect Ratio 21:9
Curved Yes
Curvature 800

Performance

Refresh Rate 240 Hz
Adaptive Sync G-Sync Compatible

Color & HDR

Brightness 275 nits
Color Gamut DCI-P3 98.5% (CIE1976)
HDR HDR10
HDR Support HDR10

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 2
DisplayPort 1
Speakers Yes
Headphone Jack Yes

Ergonomics

Height Adjustable Yes
Tilt Yes
Swivel Yes
Pivot No
VESA Mount 100x100

Features

Webcam No
Weight 11.4 kg / 25.2 lbs

Value & Pricing

At just under $1,000, it's a lot of money. But for a dedicated gaming rig, it's worth it. You're paying for that unique combination of large-scale OLED speed and an aggressive curve that you simply can't get anywhere else. If that's your specific fantasy, the price makes sense.

Price History

700 EUR 800 EUR 900 EUR 1 000 EUR 1 100 EUR 1 200 EUR 9 бер.21 бер.30 бер. 997 EUR

vs Competition

This monitor lives in a weird, awesome niche. The Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 is wider and has more screen, but it's not OLED, so you lose those perfect blacks and instant response. The MSI MPG 32" 4K monitor offers sharper detail, but you trade the immersive curve and likely some refresh rate headroom. And then there's the LG UltraGear 45"—it's bigger and has a dual-resolution mode, but again, it's not OLED. The 39GX900A-B's trick is being the only one that combines this size, this curve, and OLED tech. You pick it for that specific combo, not because it wins on every spec.

Common Questions

Q: Is the 800R curve too much for productivity?

For spreadsheets, coding, or graphic design where straight lines matter? Yeah, it's too much. This is a gaming and entertainment monitor first. For mixed use, you'll need to decide if you can live with the curve.

Q: Is WQHD sharp enough on a 39-inch screen?

It's fine for gaming and movies, but don't expect the razor-sharp text of a 4K or even a smaller WQHD screen. You're trading pixel density for a wider, more immersive field of view. It's a conscious choice.

Q: Does it work well with consoles?

The HDMI 2.1 ports and VRR support (FreeSync Premium Pro / G-Sync Compatible) make it a great match for a PlayStation 5 or Xbox Series X, especially for 120Hz games.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a creative pro who needs color accuracy and a flat, predictable image for photo or video editing, this isn't it. Go get a professional-grade IPS panel instead. Also, if your desk is small or you need to frequently adjust your monitor's height and tilt, the sheer size and basic ergonomics here will frustrate you.

Verdict

We recommend the LG Ultragear 39GX900A-B if your primary goal is maximum gaming immersion and you have the desk space for it. It's a specialized tool, not a daily driver for everyone. The curve is a love-it-or-hate-it feature, but if you love it, nothing else feels quite like this. Just be sure your graphics card can push high frames at 3440x1440 to really take advantage of that 240Hz panel.