![]() There are good and bad aspects to the port selection. You can also swap out the stand for a VESA mounting adapter if you want to. No complaints regarding the stand assembly which is strong, supports height adjustment, and can also be tilted and swivelled. There's also an RGB LED lighting setup around the central stand pillar which gets quite bright, as well as an illuminated alien logo. It somehow feels both gamer to a small degree but also clean and minimalist. It's kind of this unusual two-tone setup, but it works. The front of the monitor is largely black, so black bezels and black plastic, but the rear is mostly white. While a lot of the outer materials are plastic, it's a well built product that feels premium with tight seams and attention to detail. It's a fat monitor in the middle to house all the associated G-Sync hardware, plus it's curved, and it comes with a large, strong stand. It's quite a large display, not just in terms of the screen size, but its general housing. ![]() The overall build quality of this Alienware monitor is quite impressive. As far as high-end displays go, this is significantly less expensive than other true HDR products like the Asus ROG PG32UQX, which still costs a hefty $3,000. That's pretty standard for ultrawide monitors and it feels just right for gaming.ĭespite having the hardware to destroy much more expensive products and is one of the only gaming-suitable OLED monitors you can buy, the Alienware AW3423DW arrives with a competitive price point of $1,300. It's also a curved monitor with a 1800R curvature. Using OLED means we get true HDR hardware, and Dell is claiming up to 1000 nits of peak brightness with a 0.1ms grey to grey response time. It also arrives certified for VESA DisplayHDR True Black 400, which unlike the regular DisplayHDR 400 certification, isn't complete junk. It packs Nvidia's G-Sync Ultimate hardware module, though to be clear this monitor works with all GPUs including AMD's, even for adaptive sync. As you can expect, the AW3423DW is fully geared towards gaming, and more specifically HDR gaming. It uses one of Samsung's latest QD-OLED panels, which are different to other panels we've seen before, with a promise of improvements in brightness, efficiency and burn-in.įundamentally, the AW3423DW uses the same kind of self-lit organic LED pixels as we've seen from other OLED displays, meaning there is no backlight required. This is the first time we've seen an OLED panel with this kind of specs, and the first time OLED has reached such a refresh rate in a reasonable monitor size. The Dell Alienware AW3423DW is a 34-inch 3440 x 1440 OLED monitor with a 175 Hz maximum refresh rate. ![]()
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