Samsung Odyssey G5 LC34G55TWWRXXU 34″ 1000R Curved Gaming Monitor – 165Hz, 1ms, 1440p WQHD, Freesync Premium, HDR10, HDMI, Displayport
£309.00
Price: £309.00
(as of Jun 06, 2025 08:12:52 UTC – Details)
From the manufacturer
Optimal curve. True immersion.
The all-encompassing 1000R display fills every part of your peripheral vision and draws you right into the character’s shoes. Experience a level of gaming more heart-pounding than anything before.
Ultra WQHD
Ultra-WQHD gives you a vast encompassing view of your game world, with true lifelike detail. The sheer size delivers pure immersion — eliminating the distracting middle bezel and messy cables of a dual monitor setup.
165Hz refresh rate
Ready to conquer enemies, lag, and blur. The ultra-fast 165Hz refresh rate handles even the most exhilarating scenes and super-quick visuals.
AMD FreeSync Premium
Effortlessly smooth gameplay. AMD FreeSync Premium features adaptive sync technology which reduces screen tearing, stutter, and input latency. Low framerate compensation ensures every scene flows seamlessly.
1ms response time
Make every move count with a 1ms response time. Jump on enemies as soon as you see them and stay ahead with precise mouse movements. Your on-screen performance is as swift as your own reflexes.
Truly realistic HDR
Awe-inspiring graphics with HDR10. A kaleidoscope of shades brings game scenes to life more vibrantly than ever before. Uncover the secrets hiding in the shadows with deep dark blacks, luminous whites, and outstandingly detailed resolution.
UHD resolution – Explore and immerse yourself in every detail. With 4x the pixels of Full HD, every detail is viewed in enhanced depth, while more screen real estate provides space to view multiple tools, applications and programs during the day – creating a 4K cinematic content viewing experience night and day.
1 billion colors with HDR 10 – Enjoy any content in stunning color accuracy and detail. With a wide range of colors, near limitless hues and HDR10, which makes dark colors darker and the brightest colors even brighter, every piece of content becomes a joy to look at and can be experienced exactly as the creator intended.
Every user can expect a great viewing experience from any angle, in vivid and vibrant color without washing or fade.
Model no. LS27A800UJUXXU
Customers say
Customers praise the monitor’s OLED picture quality, deep blacks, and its suitability for work and gaming. The build quality receives mixed feedback, with some finding it sturdy while others report it breaking within a week. Picture quality and functionality also get mixed reviews, with some reporting dead pixels and others noting it doesn’t work with MacBooks. The size receives positive feedback for its perfect dimensions and small footprint, while opinions on value for money are divided between those who find it worth the price and those who consider it poor value.
3 reviews for Samsung Odyssey G5 LC34G55TWWRXXU 34″ 1000R Curved Gaming Monitor – 165Hz, 1ms, 1440p WQHD, Freesync Premium, HDR10, HDMI, Displayport
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£309.00
Farxe –
Really Good Display, Well worth it!
Bought this display recently, really happy with it. Build is lovely, Back plate is aluminium, with a glossy front finish. Smart features are a nice bonus, There is a nice mode where you can change the black tones to be a bit brighter to become a greyish tint, really helps with fps games. Just note in mind it uses micro HDMI 2.1, mini Display port 1.4, and two usb c ports, one which can read (dp 1.4) input and charge your device and the other which you can use to plug an external device to use with the monitor. I would recommend usb c to Display port connection though if your using any of the asus zephyrus linups which dont support hdmi 2.1 i would personally get a dongle. If your looking for an HDMI to micro HDMI cable (Their hard to find) i would recommend hama. Overall a great monitor. Well worth it!Edit:I have had this display for a while now, holds up great, I have not had any OLED burn-in which is a relief, not used the TV mode that much but itâs always handy, watching films in this is great, especially when the movies have a 21:9 picture. Sound quality is good, fit is perfect for where I wanted it and it was easy to set up. In the end, this was a good purchase, I would recommend you buy this product if you have the cash. Always nice to go from 16:9 to a 21:9 display, Very Nice Product Samsung! ðEdit 2:Itâs has been over a year so far, the display has been amazing. I use this display for work and video games and it performs well in both. I still have no OLED burnin yet (which is very good) and it still performs how it did when I opened the box. I have had one small issue though, with this display after a year of use sometimes (if you decide to keep your display at maximum height) it will slowly lower itself, this is because of the weight of the screen compared the stand mechanism itself. It is still an excellent purchase, I would recommend it to anyone looking for a curved ultra wide.
Mog –
Excellent Monitor
This monitor replaced a failed project of two (cheapish) screens. The line created by the bezels of the two screens was a game breaker for me and the picture was a little grainy, probably because the resolution was ‘stretched’ to cover both screens.I sent them back, and bought this Samsung. The image quality is fantastic and the 1000 curve helps to create an amazingly involved sensation. I played ‘X4’ (a space opera) in a darkened room, headphones on and it genuinely changed the entire atmosphere in the game ( I should add that my desktop PC is a liquid cooled Core I9, all SSD, with a GeForce RTX 4070 Super O.C graphics card, which I put together myself). The picture is pin sharp, no ghosting with great colours, and even the stand didn’t take up much desk space. The monitor settings are accessed through a handy little toggle switch to the center of the screen, underneath, which is also the on/off switch and lights up blue when on. Wall mounting is also easy.Easily the best monitor that I have ever been lucky enough to own. Recommended.
Mendo Shutaro –
Incredible panel saddled with a pointless operating system and a terrible remote
Having come from a high end 1000nit LCD I didn’t know how much of an improvement this would be, afterall this too is a 1000nit display. But I know from my experience with OLED TVs that those deep blacks can make a big difference. (note: it defaults to 400 nits, you need to set “peak brightness” to HIGH to enable 1000nit mode)First impressions are strong. This is super slim as you would expect from OLED and the stand has a small footprint and is subtle. No riduclous “I’M A GAMER” over the top nonsense here. The stand is easily built too, you just need a screwdriver.Then I turned it on, and surprisingly this thing has Samsung’s regular Tizen TV OS in it, with apps and a TV guide and all in 16:9 with borders. Bizarre stuff. Why is all of this stuff in a PC monitor? And it’s not something you can ignore either, it wants wi-fi and a Samsung log-in, and you’ll need to go deep into its poorly labelled options to set your inputs up. Even then you’re not done as changing inputs requires multiple buttons presses on the remote (yes, there’s a remote control too) to pick your way through the painfully slow and poorly designed OS.I just mentioned a remote, another weird addition to a PC display. It looks like an Apple TV remote from its design and size, but rather than being built like a tank out of metal as Apple do, this is incredibly flimsy plastic. As it’s the only way to navigate the monitor’s OS you best take good care of it, as one false move and this little piece of plastic junk will break. And it has no input selector button (!!), but it does have buttons for Disney+ and Netflix. Samsung, you need help.Other things of note, the monitor has speakers built in which sound like you would expect them too (terrible). It can output sound over bluetooth though through any of its inputs, even Display Port. When it comes to inputs you get three, Display Port, HDMI, and Thunderbolt. In another head scatchingly weird move Samsung have opted to go with a micro HDMI. a mini Display port, and a reglular Thunderbolt (which looks like USB-C, but isn’t, so be careful which cable you buy). Why the tiny connections on a gigantic monitor? Who knows.Now onto the good stuff. Well the picture is phenomenal. Just phenomenal. Perfect blacks, high peak brightness (on a small area of the screen, the auto brightness limiter prevents it from displaying high brightness on the whole screen), and so much colour volume. I had to turn the saturation down as out of the box it looked really overcooked, but even then it shames my LG C2 TV with its WOLED panel. Quantum Dot OLED is impressive tech. For gaming it’s fantastic of course, 175hz and it works fine with GSync, even though it isn’t a GSync certified display with one big caveat. If you’re on a 40 series NVidia GPU and you’re using DLSS 3 frame generation there will be extensive tearing in game. This can be alieviated by forcing VSync on in the NVidia control panel, but this will unfortunately add some lag. It’s too bad this isn’t a real GSync Ultimate display, as it was originally going to be.And finally I had heard this suffered from fringing on text due to the triangular structure of the RGB sub pixels on QD-OLED screens. Well in all honesty unless I sit weirdly close to the screen I can barely see it at all. It’s so suble I have to look for it, but 99% of the time I don’t see it at all.Overall then an amazing display in a nice looking package which for reasons I doubt even Samsung know was burdened with an unecessary and painfully slow OS from a TV. And weirdly tiny input connectors. And a remote which feels like it cost about 20p. If you can live with those inconveniences then the display itself is outstanding.