Having a higher refresh rate means a screen appears smoother and less jittery, and video games are more responsive to play — especially when combined with OLED’s near-instant response times. Until recently it was rare to find an OLED screen with a refresh rate above 120Hz, but that has changed in recent months. YouTube channel HDTVTest reported in May that Samsung’s S95B QD-OLED TV had become the first OLED TV to support a 144Hz refresh rate (albeit unofficially), while Alienware’s AW3423DW, which also uses a QD-OLED display from the Samsung screen, it does everything. up to 175 Hz. LCD screens already have much higher refresh rates Now, however, we’re seeing OLED displays that go up to 240 Hz appear. HDTVTest reported earlier this month that the MSI GE67 HX laptop has the world’s first 240Hz OLED display, and Razer has also announced a 240Hz OLED laptop of its own. Just this week we also saw Corsair announce a 240Hz OLED display, although the fact that it can be manually bent into a curved display stole a bit of attention from the high refresh rate. Aside from its refresh rate, the UltraGear 45GR95QE’s other specs include a 21:9 aspect ratio, 800R curvature, and display capability of 98.5 of the DCI-P3 color gamut. It has a 1440p resolution, an HDMI 2.1 port with support for variable refresh rates and an additional DisplayPort 1.4 connector. There are also built-in picture-in-picture and picture-in-picture functions for viewing content from multiple sources side-by-side. While the refresh rates of OLED panels are improving, they are still far behind what LCD can do. LCD monitors with 360Hz refresh rates are becoming more and more common, and earlier this year we saw the first 500Hz Nvidia G-Sync gaming monitor announced by Asus.