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HP OMEN Transcend D32 31.5" Black/White 2025

The 31.5-inch QD-OLED 4K panel delivers 240Hz and a 0.03ms response time, with DisplayHDR True Black 400 for inky blacks and 99% P3 coverage. USB-C offers 140W power delivery and OMEN Gear Switch for seamless device switching, while HyperX-tuned audio adds convenience. Best for competitive gamers and color-accurate content creators who need both high refresh rates and reliable connectivity.

★★★★☆ 4.4 (4)
Screen 31.5
Resolution 3840x2160
Panel QD-OLED
Refresh 240 Hz
response time ms 0.029999999329447746
adaptive sync FreeSync Premium Pro
hdr DisplayHDR True Black 400
HP OMEN Transcend D32 31.5" Black/White 2025 monitor
87 Gesamtbewertung
Preis 675 $
Auch erhältlich in:

Über dieses Monitor

The 31.5-inch QD-OLED 4K panel delivers 240Hz and a 0.03ms response time, with DisplayHDR True Black 400 for inky blacks and 99% P3 coverage. USB-C offers 140W power delivery and OMEN Gear Switch for seamless device switching, while HyperX-tuned audio adds convenience. Best for competitive gamers and color-accurate content creators who need both high refresh rates and reliable connectivity.

  • Screen size 31.5
  • Resolution 3840x2160
  • Panel type QD-OLED
  • Refresh rate 240
  • Response time ms 0.029999999329447746
  • Adaptive sync FreeSync Premium Pro
  • HDR DisplayHDR True Black 400

The 30-Second Version

The HP OMEN Transcend 32 serves up jaw-dropping 4K QD-OLED visuals at 240Hz with best-in-class connectivity. But firmware bugs and a mouse-related KVM blackout issue keep it from being a perfect daily driver. If you find it at a steep discount and don't mind tinkering, it's a killer screen.

Overview

HP's OMEN Transcend 32 is a 31.5" 4K QD-OLED monitor that throws everything at the wall: 240Hz, near-instant 0.03ms response, and a connectivity suite that's basically future-proof. On paper it's a gamer's dream and a content creator's secret weapon, and for the most part that's exactly how it plays out in real life. But a handful of nagging firmware bugs and one truly ridiculous power brick keep this from being an unconditional recommendation.

When the panel is singing, it's breathtaking. Deep inky blacks, blistering motion clarity, and colors that make HDR games look real enough to touch. You'll notice it the second you launch a AAA title or even just scroll through dark-mode apps. Just be ready for some head-scratching moments if you dig into the KVM features or try to update the firmware, because that's where HP's software polish falls apart.

Performance

This thing is absurdly fast. 240Hz at 4K is no joke, and the 0.03ms response time means zero visible ghosting, even in twitchy shooters. Brightness tops out at a modest 250 nits, but the OLED contrast ratio makes HDR True Black 400 pop way harder than the number suggests. Connectivity is the real star: DP 2.1b, USB-C with 140W laptop charging, and a KVM switch that should be a productivity godsend. Except it's not. Owners report a bug where double-clicking a mouse during KVM switching blacks out the screen, and firmware updates have been known to brick things more than fix them. For pure gaming, you're in top-tier territory, but if you need flawless multi-device switching, you'll curse HP under your breath.

Performance Percentiles

Color 61.8
Portability 82
Display 97.3
Feature 72.8
Ergonomic 90.3
Performance 97.9
Connectivity 99.6
Social Proof 97.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • QD-OLED panel delivers stunning contrast, deep blacks, and vibrant colors right out of the box. 100th
  • 240Hz 4K with 0.03ms response makes motion so smooth it feels like cheating. 98th
  • Connectivity is best-in-class with DP 2.1b, USB-C 140W PD, and a versatile KVM switch. 98th
  • Sturdy, fully adjustable stand with VESA support for easy mounting. 97th

Cons

  • The external power brick is comically large, a cable management nightmare.
  • Firmware updates are unreliable and can introduce more bugs than they fix.
  • KVM input switching breaks if you double-click a mouse, causing random black screens.
  • On-screen controls are cryptic and need far too many button presses for simple adjustments.

The Word on the Street

4.4/5 (740 reviews)
👍 Multiple owners say the QD-OLED picture is the best they've ever seen, with deep blacks and vivid HDR that transforms both gaming and media.
👎 A common frustration is that the firmware update process is broken and can cause more stability problems than it solves.
👎 Several buyers report the on-screen controls are unintuitive and the massive power brick is a dealbreaker for clean setups.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Size 31.5"
Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)
Panel Type QD-OLED
Aspect Ratio 16:9
Curved No

Performance

Refresh Rate 240 Hz
Response Time 0.03
Adaptive Sync FreeSync Premium Pro

Color & HDR

Brightness 250 nits
Color Gamut 99% P3
Color Depth 10-bit
HDR DisplayHDR True Black 400
HDR Support HDR400

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 2
DisplayPort 1
USB-C 3
Thunderbolt N/A
Speakers Yes
Headphone Jack Yes

Ergonomics

Height Adjustable Yes
Tilt Yes
Swivel Yes
Pivot Yes
VESA Mount 100x100

Features

Webcam No
Touchscreen No
Power 126
Weight 8.8 kg / 19.4 lbs

Value & Pricing

Pricing is all over the place. We've seen it listed from $675 to over $30,000, which is obviously insane. If you can grab a refurbished unit from Newegg or catch a real sale under $800, it's a steal for the panel quality and connectivity you're getting. But at full MSRP or the wild high-end listings, you should look elsewhere because competitors offer similar performance with fewer headaches. Shop smart, and this monitor can be one of the best deals in the 4K OLED space. Pay a cent over a grand, and you're overpaying given the firmware mess.

Price History

New Refurbished
600 $ 800 $ 1.000 $ 1.200 $ 1.400 $ 3. Mai16. Mai3. Juni13. Juni 900 $

vs Competition

Compared to the Alienware AW3423DWF, the HP gives you a flat 32" 4K panel instead of an ultrawide and bumps the refresh to 240Hz, making it the sharper choice for competitive gaming and color work. The Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 offers a massive 57" mini-LED display with way higher peak brightness, but it's enormous and can't match OLED black levels. The ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG and MSI MAG 272UP both come in smaller 27" sizes and trade some resolution or refresh rate for portability. If you want a do-it-all 4K OLED with no compromises on speed or ports, the OMEN Transcend 32 is the most well-rounded pick, as long as you can stomach its software quirks.

Spec HP OMEN Transcend D32 31.5" ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG LG UltraGear 32GX850A-B Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 LS57CG952NNXZA MSI MPG 272URX QD-OLED Dell UltraSharp U4025QW
Screen Size 31.5 26.5 32 57 27 39.70000076293945
Resolution 3840x2160 2560 x 1440 3840 x 2160 7680 x 2160 3840 x 2160 5120 x 2160
Panel Type QD-OLED OLED OLED VA OLED IPS
Refresh Rate 240 240 165 240 240 120
Response Time Ms 0.029999999329447746 0.029999999329447746 0.029999999329447746 1 0.029999999329447746 5
Adaptive Sync FreeSync Premium Pro FreeSync Premium Pro FreeSync Premium Pro FreeSync Premium Pro G-Sync Compatible Adaptive-Sync
Hdr DisplayHDR True Black 400 HDR10 DisplayHDR True Black 400 HDR10+ DisplayHDR True Black 400 DisplayHDR 600
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product ColorCompactDisplayFeatureErgonomicPerformanceConnectivitySocial Proof
HP OMEN Transcend D32 31.5" 61.88297.372.890.397.999.697.6
ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG Compare 96.673.475.272.890.397.992.997.6
LG UltraGear 32GX850A-B Compare 80.854.498.772.890.396.297.997.6
Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 LS57CG952NNXZA Compare 99.673.499.797.47288.299.297.6
MSI MPG 272URX QD-OLED Compare 95.963.397.386.690.397.982.288
Dell UltraSharp U4025QW Compare 97.786.598.297.4725799.297.6

Common Questions

Q: Can I mount this monitor on a wall?

Absolutely. It uses a standard VESA 100x100mm pattern, so just remove the stand and attach any compatible arm or wall mount.

Q: What are the actual refresh rate and response time?

It runs at a native 240Hz with a 0.03ms gray-to-gray response time, which is about as fast as OLED monitors get right now.

Q: Does it work with G-Sync or just FreeSync?

It's officially FreeSync Premium Pro, but NVIDIA certifies it as G-Sync Compatible, so you'll get smooth variable refresh rates on both AMD and NVIDIA cards.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this if you need a seamless multi-device KVM experience or hate firmware tinkering. The double-click blackout bug is a real pain if you plan to switch between PCs frequently, and HP's software track record here doesn't inspire confidence. If a clean desk matters, look elsewhere too, that power brick is a beast.

Verdict

This monitor is for gamers and hybrid creators who want a high-refresh 4K OLED that doubles as a docking station, and don't mind some early-adopter jank. The picture quality and motion performance are among the absolute best we've tested, and the connectivity alone could replace a docking hub. Just know that you might need to avoid certain firmware updates and be very deliberate with your mouse clicks around the KVM switch. If you can live with that, it's a fantastic display that earns its high marks.

Usage Scores

Overall (86.5)Gaming (83.2)Office (86)Creative (76.5)Portable (15.7)Professional (82.3)Entertainment (71.6)

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