Best Curved Monitors 2024: Our picks for the top 7 curvy displays
Curved monitors are a fantastic means of getting yourself immersed, be it for PC games, work or otherwise. But finding the best curved monitors can be tricky with so many specs to consider,
This is why we’ve decided to step in and help out. We test a wide selection of curved displays every year, and based on these reviews, we’ve formed this list of the best.
Not every panel is going to suit everyone, so we’ve made sure to include a variety of prices and sizes so people have at least one monitor to get behind.
We’ve also focused on the most important things people look for when buying a monitor. This can range from how vibrant and accurate the display’s colours are, as well as whether they have enough gaming features to give you the edge in the likes of Call of Duty.
To get the best results, our team of experts have spent at least a week with each device, made judgements on the display and design based on real-world experience, and also carried out tests using expert equipment such as colourimeters.
If you can’t see a curved monitor you like just yet, be sure to bookmark this page for the future as we’ll be updating it with any more top candidates that pass through Trusted Labs throughout the the year. You may also want to check out our list of the best gaming monitors, if you’re after something for all your PC gaming needs, or our list of the best monitors for more of a general look.
Best curved monitors at a glance
- Best overall curved monitor: Samsung Odyssey Neo G8 – check price
- Best ultra-wide curved monitor: Lenovo Legion R45w-30 – check price
- Best OLED curved monitor: Asus ROG Swift OLED PG49WCD – check price
- Best video conferencing curved monitor: HP Z40c G3 – check price
- Best value curved monitor: MSI MPG Artymis 273CQRX-QD – check price
- Best budget curved monitor: Huawei MateView GT – check price
- Best premium curved monitor: Samsung Odyssey Ark (2022) – check price
How we test
We use every monitor we test for at least a week. During that time, we’ll check it for ease of use and put it through its paces by using it for both everyday tasks and more specialist, colour-sensitive work.
We also check its colours and image quality with a colorimeter to test its coverage and the display’s quality.
- Incredible SDR and HDR contrast performance
- Top-notch colours
- A vast resolution, a curved screen and a huge refresh rate
- Good-looking design offering lots of adjustment
- Requires an expensive graphics card
- Occasionally mediocre exterior
- Disappointing RGB LEDs
- Superb contrast performance
- Good mainstream colour accuracy
- Lots of features
- Well-balanced specification
- Mediocre build quality
- Some ghosting evident
- No real HDR ability
- Bold, vibrant colours and contrast
- A decent in-built speaker
- Cheaper than the competition
- Immersive widescreen form factor
- A little too blurry in fast games
- Underwhelming HDR performance
- Middling connectivity and adjustment
- Huge size and immersive, adjustable design
- Superb mainstream image quality
- Lots of software options
- Loud, punchy speakers
- Some modes could be better
- Response time and colour could be slightly improved
- Some missing connectivity
- Outrageously expensive
- Huge widescreen resolution
- Gentle curve for immersion
- Loads of features, including a KVM and excellent webcam
- Good everyday colour quality
- Heavy and expensive
- Can’t fully handle the DCI-P3 or Adobe RGB gamuts
- Not as bright as rival options
- Excellent value
- Compact for an ultrawide
- Good speakers
- One-button KVM switch
- Big stand
- Bright in SDR and HDR modes
- Full KVM support
- Excellent panel uniformity
- Top-notch motion fidelity
- Refresh rate on the low side at 144Hz
- No speakers
Samsung Odyssey Neo G8
Best overall curved monitor
Pros
- Incredible SDR and HDR contrast performance
- Top-notch colours
- A vast resolution, a curved screen and a huge refresh rate
- Good-looking design offering lots of adjustment
Cons
- Requires an expensive graphics card
- Occasionally mediocre exterior
- Disappointing RGB LEDs
The Samsung Odyssey Neo G8 is one of the best curved monitors you can buy, especially for gaming given it’s the world’s first 4K panel with a 240Hz refresh rate.
It features a Mini LED backlight offering stunningly high brightness, which we measured to be 1411 nits with our colorimeter. This also helped the Neo G8 along to an excellent HDR performance and a wide colour space coverage – we measured it to offer 99% sRGB and 92% DCI-P3. This means you could use the Neo G8 for more colour-sensitive work such as video editing without worrying that colours don’t look true to form.
Returning the point of gaming, the 240Hz refresh rate offers up smooth motion with only minor bouts of ghosting, and combined with the detail on offer with a 4K panel, you’ll be hard pressed to find a better gaming monitor. In addition, the 1000R curve helped to keep things immersive, offering the same curvature as Samsung’s other Odyssey monitors, as well as one that matches a person’s eyeline.
We also think the G8’s design looks fantastic with its glossy white plastic finish, while also being durable thanks to its sandblasted metal base.
This is an expensive monitor, and so is only really a top choice for those who’ve got the money to burn. But if you want one of the absolute best curved gaming monitors on the market, this is our top recommendation.
Reviewer: Mike Jennings
Full review: Samsung Odyssey Neo G8 review
Lenovo Legion R45w-30
Best ultra-wide curved monitor
Pros
- Excellent value
- Compact for an ultrawide
- Good speakers
- One-button KVM switch
Cons
- Big stand
Curved monitors are cool and all but have they achieved their full potential until you are utterly surround by screen? The Lenovo Legion R45w-30 does just that and is our pick for the best ultra-wide curved monitor you can buy.
The Legion monitor comes with a whopping 44.5-inch 1500R curved 5120 x 1440 display, that’s some specifications to absolutely knock your socks off. The VA panel used here can get very bright with a peak brightness of around 415 nits and an excellent contrast of 3020:1. Despite there being no fancy OLED or Mini-LED technology on display, the blacks are still pleasingly inky and colour accuracy is strong for a gaming monitor.
Along with the top-notch screen itself, this Lenovo offers a useful KVM switch, which allows you to plug all your accessories directly into the display, using it as a dock for whatever machine you’d like to use alongside it.
The massive and excellent screen, along with great add-on features, aren’t the full story here. It’s the less than £800/$800 that makes this a 5-star device, a beater of many better flagship monitors that come at a much higher price.
Reviewer: Alun Taylor
Full review: Lenovo Legion R45w-30 review
Asus ROG Swift OLED PG49WCD
Best OLED curved monitor
Pros
- Bright in SDR and HDR modes
- Full KVM support
- Excellent panel uniformity
- Top-notch motion fidelity
Cons
- Refresh rate on the low side at 144Hz
- No speakers
The Asus ROG Swift OLED PG49WCD doesn’t come cheap, costing comfortably over a £1,000/$1,000 but what you’ve getting is a stunningly immersive and luxurious experience. That’s why it’s our pick for the best OLED curved monitor.
Expectedly, the highlight of this monitor is the glorious OLED display, the specifications come in at a massive 49-inches, a high 5120 x 1440 resolution, 1800R curve and 144Hz refresh rate. It’s a remarkably combination that makes this a belter of screen whether you’re playing games, getting productivity work done, doing intensive creative work or taking in a movie.
This Asus ROG Swift OLED comes with impressively bright SDR and HDR modes, truly top-tier panel uniformity and high-grade motion fidelity, with the latter two being ideal features for creatives and gamers alike.
There’s also a tremendously useful KVM switch, meaning you can use this Asus monitor like a dock, letting you plug in mice, keyboards and more for us with any laptop or PC you connect with it. A supremely handy timesaver.
Reviewer: Alun Taylor
Full review: Asus ROG Swift OLED PG49WCD review
HP Z40c G3
Best video conferencing monitor
Pros
- Huge widescreen resolution
- Gentle curve for immersion
- Loads of features, including a KVM and excellent webcam
- Good everyday colour quality
Cons
- Heavy and expensive
- Can’t fully handle the DCI-P3 or Adobe RGB gamuts
- Not as bright as rival options
The HP Z40c G3 is a curved monitor made for an office or working-from-home set-up, with a webcam plonked on top for convenient video calling.
The webcam is the key feature here, and you will see it gloriously emerge from the top of the monitor with a simple tap. Once it’s up and running, you’ll be getting 13MP clarity, providing detailed and accurate results. There’s Windows Hello too for speedy sign-in. The camera can also be tilted down if you need to adjust the viewing angle. Being able to tap it back into the monitor frame is ideal for the privacy-conscious and the webcam is paired with some noise-cancelling microphones, not to mention and some pleasingly loud speakers too which make video calling an absolute breeze with no additional peripherals needed.
The camera is the big sell with the HP Z40c G3 but as you can imagine, it needs to be backed up by a decent screen. Thankfully, that is very much the case and it needs to be as this panel comes in at an admittedly pricey £1,000-plus. You don’t get fancy Mini LED technology but you do get a pixel dense 5120×2160 resolution display that measures in at 39.7-inches. The large curved widescreen will have you fully immersed while the IPS technology brings an acceptable level of brightness, solid contrast ratio and accurate colours.
This isn’t a panel made to take on the very best around when it comes to wondrous colour for creativity or high-end gaming. Instead, it’s made for professionals who feel like they spend their lives in meetings and want a big display that’ll make their lives a little easier.
Reviewer: Mike Jennings
Full review: HP Z40c G3 review
MSI MPG Artymis 273CQRX-QD
Best value curved monitor
Pros
- Superb contrast performance
- Good mainstream colour accuracy
- Lots of features
- Well-balanced specification
Cons
- Mediocre build quality
- Some ghosting evident
- No real HDR ability
If you fancy one of the best curved monitors available, but are also on a budget, we think the MSI MPG Artymis 273CQRX-QD is a truly fantastic mid-range option.
With a Quantum Dot LED backlight on offer, we found it to offer great brightness, with a measured figure of 432 nits, as well as excellent contrast for the price, as demonstrated by the 3100:1 ratio measured with our colorimeter.
The 2560×1440 resolution helped to offer a crisp picture, and better quality images than what you’d find with 1080p screen. Combine this with the silky smoothness of a 240Hz refresh rate and the responsiveness of a 1ms response time, and we think you’ve got an especially capable gaming monitor.
With that being said, the minimal support for DisplayHDR400 did leave the HDR experience underwhelming, especially at this asking price. You may want to look elsewhere if a top-notch HDR performance is a must have, although it will cost you a fair bit more.
In terms of its design, MSI’s curved candidate features slim bezels and oodles of configurable RGB lighting round the back. We also found there to be a good amount of adjustment here with height, tilt and swivel on offer, and at 6.6kg, it’s remarkably lightweight for a monitor this size.
Reviewer: Mike Jennings
Full Review: MSI MPG Artymis 273CQRX-QD review
Huawei MateView GT
Best budget curved monitor
Pros
- Bold, vibrant colours and contrast
- A decent in-built speaker
- Cheaper than the competition
- Immersive widescreen form factor
Cons
- A little too blurry in fast games
- Underwhelming HDR performance
- Middling connectivity and adjustment
The Huawei MateView GT is the brand’s first ever gaming monitor, and represents one of the most budget-friendly options of the best curved monitors we’ve tested.
We found it to offer fabulous contrast, as reflected in the panel’s 5125:1 score in our tests. In line with this, the MateView GT impressed us with its wide colour space coverage of 99.2% sRGB and 86.9% DCI-P3. This translated into bold, bright colours in mainstream games, which made them look crisp and sharp in testing.
Switching to HDR mode revealed a peak brightness of 399 nits, as measured with our colorimeter in hand. A 165Hz refresh rate is also great, alongside a 4ms response time which will be fine for most people, although competitive players may wish to look for something lower.
A screen size of 34 inches is about right for immersive gameplay, alongside the solid 3440×1440 resolution. In addition, the 1500R curve helps to improve immersion, although the Cooler Master GM34-CW‘s 1000R will be better if you’re after a tighter curve. The VA panel helped with the good response time, and support for 10-bit colour was welcome.
We also found the construction to be impressive, with the MateView GT’s stand being a pure metal slab. There’s good scope for adjustment, alongside an intriguing party piece at the bottom of the stand: an integrated soundbar. The speaker here features plenty of volume and had no trouble filling a room, and the bass is punchy alongside decent mid-range clarity, and overall. We found them to suffice well for mainstream gaming but for anything else, you’ll want to consider a soundbar or external speakers.
Reviewer: Mike Jennings
Full review: Huawei MateView GT review
Samsung Odyssey Ark (2022)
Best premium curved monitor
Pros
- Huge size and immersive, adjustable design
- Superb mainstream image quality
- Lots of software options
- Loud, punchy speakers
Cons
- Some modes could be better
- Response time and colour could be slightly improved
- Some missing connectivity
- Outrageously expensive
The Samsung Odyssey Ark is a fantastic curved monitor and well worth its high price tag. It comes with a 4K resolution, so you can play your favourite supported games with a high level of detail. The high resolution also makes it perfect for watching the latest blockbuster movies, as our reviewer noted how crisp and sharp the images are on screen.
It features a 165Hz refresh rate for buttery smooth gaming, aided by AMD FreeSync Premium Pro. Compared to some other monitors on this list – like the Samsung Odyssey Neo G8 and Odyssey Geo N9 – this is a middling refresh rate, however, we found that it was more than serviceable for high-quality single-player titles and mainstream esports gaming. We would recommend checking out the aforementioned Samsung Odyssey Neo monitors if you need a device that can run at 240Hz.
The inclusion of AMD FreeSync Premium Pro ensures that you won’t encounter issues like screen tearing while you play, although you will want to make sure that you’ve invested in a high-end graphics card that can handle 4K and 165Hz gameplay for the smoothest experience possible. Check out our Best Graphics Cards roundup to see all the powerful options on the market right now.
This monitor comes with its own built-in speakers, meaning that you won’t need to worry about finding external speakers before you get stuck into a new game. It features four speakers and two woofers; we thought that the speakers supplied a thumping bass, detailed mid-range notes and crisp high notes that were expansive and immersive. Our reviewer claimed that they were on par with high-end TVs and better than speakers found on most gaming screens, making this the perfect option for any audiophiles out there.
This monitor does cost a pretty penny, with a price tag hitting £2599/$3499. However, if you want a monitor that has crisp visuals and a speaker that rivals most other monitors, then the Samsung Odyssey Ark (2022) may be the best pick for you.
Reviewer: Mike Jennings
Full review: Samsung Odyssey Ark (2022)
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Samsung has become one of the most popular brands for curved monitors in recent years, but there are plenty of other great brands too such as MSI and Asus.
That’s subjective. Curved monitors don’t necessarily have better screen specs or features, but having a curved panel improves immersion since it’s easier to see the full screen with peripheral vision. Ultra-wide curved panels also enable you to see more in a game, such as the entire pitch in FIFA.
Yes, there’s no reason why a curved monitor can’t have a 4K resolution.