Skip to main content

Why I couldn’t live without an ultrawide gaming monitor

Spider-Man running on the LG UltraGear OLED 45.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

The debate between a dual-monitor setup and ultrawide is one for the ages (or, at least, the last decade), but I firmly fall into the ultrawide camp. That’s why it surprised me to see my colleague Jon Martindale sing the praises of a dual-monitor setup over an ultrawide. I have to push back.

Martindale makes some valid points, from the cost of ultrawide monitors to the pixel density of such a large display. But, for the way I use my monitor, I couldn’t imagine using anything else. Here’s why.

Recommended Videos

Perfectly immersive

The Alienware QD-OLED monitor in front of a window.
Digital Trends

I’ve used ultrawide monitors for close to a decade (hard to say exactly when; the years start blurring together at one point or another). I started with an atrocious LG 29-inch ultrawide display, moved up to the Massdrop Vast, and now I have one of the best gaming monitors you can buy, the Alienware 34 QD-OLED. Not everyone is in the market to spend $1,000 on a monitor, but I’ve stuck with ultrawide monitors since the first one I bought for $200 for the same reason — they’re immersive.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

That’s one of those words that gets thrown around so often that it’s almost lost all its meaning, but the 21:9 aspect ratio truly sucks you into games. It’s informed by how often we see regular 16:9 displays, especially for gaming. When you boot up something on an ultrawide monitor, there’s a subconscious sense that you’re seeing part of an image that most other people aren’t. You are literally seeing more of the game world, not just the same world on a larger screen.

Ratchet and Clank Rift Apart on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

There are some games where that makes a big difference for immersion. For instance, Ratchet & Clank Rift Apart on PC has a circular blur that runs on the outside of the screen, but you’d never really see it on a 16:9 monitor. As you run past characters on an ultrawide display, they slowly blur on the edge of the frame before zipping past you, making you feel like you’re moving through a 3D space, not just moving a character on a 2D screen.

And there’s nothing better than using an ultrawide for strategy games. From Civilization VI to Cities Skylines to Stellaris, seeing more of the playing space at one time is huge for making decisions. With only a few rare exceptions — like some indies that stretch to 21:9 rather than natively supporting the aspect ratio — the vast majority of games I play look better on an ultrawide than they do on a 16:9 monitor.

Great for work

A woman using a 38-inch ultrawide Dell monitor.
Getty Images

You probably need a monitor for more than just playing games, and once again, ultrawide displays make productivity a breeze. You don’t get the full screen space of having two 16:9 monitors (unless you go with something like the Samsung Odyssey Neo G9), but you still get a lot more room.

The main reason I use an ultrawide for work is that I can pull up two windows side by side. In my work, this involves a story I’m working on and a browser window for research, but there are a ton of other use cases. Pull up a YouTube video or Netflix show while you’re shopping; have Spotify open while running through spreadsheets; or sneak in a Discord chat while you’re replying to emails.

And when you need to go fullscreen, ultrawide monitors are great for that. From Pro Tools to Adobe Premiere Pro, seeing more of your workspace window can make a huge difference, rather than trying to cram everything on a single screen. If you’re a creative professional, an ultrawide monitor is a must.

No headaches

Multiple monitors and laptop on desk.
Shutterstock

If you haven’t used a multi-monitor setup, you’re in for a lot of hassle. There are a ton of multi-monitor problems, from screens randomly going black to mismatched refresh rates to games and apps launching on the wrong screen. It can be a mess.

A single monitor solves those issues, and an ultrawide gives you more room to work without the headaches that can come up with multiple monitors. It makes your entire setup much easier to cable manage, too, especially if you have a particularly long desk like I do.

Ultrawides aren’t right for everyone, especially if need multiple full-screen apps up at once. But, if you’re looking for a single Swiss Army Knife of a display that can game as well as it can work, jumping to 21:9 might be for you.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
This is the one gaming CPU I recommend over the Ryzen 7 9800X3D
Pads on the bottom of the Ryzen 9 7950X.

AMD's new Ryzen 7 9800X3D is already one of the best processors you can buy. It delivers productivity and gaming gains across the board, though not in equal strides. Despite the improvements AMD made, the last-gen Ryzen 7 7800X3D is still potent competition, particularly when it comes to gaming.

These are two of the go-to gaming CPUs right now, and although the Ryzen 7 9800X3D is newer and faster, the Ryzen 7 7800X3D is still the right CPU for most people. That becomes clear when you look at the main focus of these CPUs -- gaming performance -- and how prices are starting to settle.
Specs and pricing

Read more
OLED monitors are about to get a ‘comprehensive breakthrough’ in image quality
A color splash on the LG UltraGear Dual Mode OLED.

TCL is best known for making TVs, but the company is eyeing a slot among the best gaming monitors with its new OLED tech. During the Omdia Korea Display Conference, the company highlighted "comprehensive breakthroughs in image quality, power consumption, and lifespan" for OLED monitors and laptops utilizing its new inkjet-printed OLED displays, as reported by FlatPanelsHD.

Inkjet-printed OLED, or IJP OLED, sounds a little ridiculous, but it's tech we've known about for close to a year. Current OLED production is problematic, according to OLED-Info, with deposits of the organic commands used for OLED displays introducing contaminants into the panel. This reduces the yield, but according to TCL, its new IJP OLED process can lead to not only higher yields, but also improvements in image quality.

Read more
No, generative AI isn’t taking over your PC games anytime soon
Cyberpunk 2077 running on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.

Surprise -- the internet is upset. This time, it's about a recent article from PC Gamer on the future of generative AI in video games. It's a topic I've written about previously, and something that game companies have been experimenting with for more than a year, but this particular story struck a nerve.

Redditors used strong language like "pro-AI puff piece," PC Gamer itself issued an apology, and the character designer for Bioshock Infinite's Elizabeth called the featured image showing the character reimagined with AI a "half-assed cosplay." The original intent of the article is to glimpse into the future at what games could look like with generative AI, but without the tact or clear realization of how this shift affects people's jobs and their creative works.

Read more