It's fine, I didn't want a good credit score anyway. Who needs a 4K OLED gaming monitor with a nice discount? Not me, no sir
MSI's 321URX takes that same panel tech found in the competition and for Amazon Prime Day, chops the price down too
Exceptional in almost every way, MSI's QD-OLED 321URX already tops our best 4K gaming monitor list, and that was before it had its price snipped by $85. Outstanding color accuracy, 240 Hz refresh rate, insanely quick response time, and exceptional pixel density. It's the ultimate high-end gaming panel for good reason. This deal is for Prime members only.
Key specs: 32-inch | 240 Hz | 0.03 ms | QD-OLED
Price check: Newegg $744.99
This is without a doubt the best monitor deal I've seen during this year's Amazon Prime Day… week… thing. And we're coming to the end of it, too, for at least a few months.
MSI's MPG 321URX QD-OLED is an absolute spectacle of a display (seriously, check out Jeremy's review). Uncompromising in practically every element of its design. 4K, 32-inch, perfect pixel density, 240 Hz refresh, and an astonishingly quick response time, backed up with fantastic color accuracy to boot. There's just everything you could want in a 32-inch 4K panel here.
Right now, (although for how long I don't know, because they're selling faster than second-hand SSDs on Facebook Marketplace), you can pick one of MSI's 321URX QD-OLEDs up for an impressively low $745 at Amazon, down from $830.
Now that's not a huge amount relatively in the grand scheme of things, but it's actually far more than that when you look at how this screen is already positioned in the market. The 321URX uses the same Samsung panel that you can find in Asus's ROG Swift OLED PG32UCDM, Alienware's equivalent, Gigabyte, and all the other gaming brands who've managed to snap a contract up off of the big Korean giants.
The difference is that those screens already cost $500, $300, $200 more than this thing did at launch, for effectively the same quality, the same monitor. That makes the price difference just massive by comparison.
Let's talk about the screen for a second here, and ignore the brand that's packaged it up in that cute little chassis, because it truly is a monster. You might be asking, why is this better? What's so good about QD-OLED compared to your stock standard LG OLED affair? And it mostly comes down to that quantum dot layer that sits on top and how both panel techs optimize for peak brightness in scenes.
Say you have an explosion, or you're casting Giant's Flame in Elden Ring, and the game demands high brightness on a rich and saturated color palette. A traditional OLED screen is actually comprised of four subpixels, RGB, and then an additional W (white) one to boost the brightness up. The issue with that is that the white light tends to almost desaturate a lot of the color on the fringes of that explosion or effect, leading to seemingly pastel colors instead of what they should actually be.
QD-OLED instead uses a global blue backlight that's shifted through the quantum dots into red and green to effectively pump up the brightness without impacting the color.
There's also some magic going on at the sub-pixel layer as well, that improves font and detail clarity at smaller sizes (more critical on a desktop PC than your mom's OLED TV), and there's some smart ambient-light reflection tech in here as well, stopping darker tones from refracting ambient lighting and changing tone.
In essence, QD-OLED is just that traditional OLED tech, but dialled all the way up, and bloody hell is it good. There's a reason this is our top 4K gaming monitor, and how MSI can afford to package all of that into the 321URX, and then discount it on top of that, is a mystery.
Oh, and one last mention, burn-in, because I know you're thinking about it, I'm thinking about it, everybody's thinking about it. MSI still provides a hefty three-year warranty cover, the same as everyone else, and there's plenty of tech in there to keep your UI in-game and not etched into your shiny new $745 screen for all of time.
Now, where exactly did I put my special SSD stash? Papa needs a brand new monitor.
👉Check out all the best Amazon Prime Day Monitor Deals👈

1. Best overall / 4K:
MSI MPG 321URX
2. Best budget 4K:
Asus ROG Strix XG27UCG
3. Best 1440p:
MSI MPG 271QRX
4. Best budget 1440p:
KTC H27T22C-3
5. Best 1080p:
AOC Gaming C27G4ZXE
6. Best Ultrawide:
Gigabyte MO34WQC2
7. Best budget ultrawide:
Xiaomi G34WQi
8. Best 32:9:
Samsung Odyssey OLED G9
9. Best dual-mode:
Alienware AW2725QF
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
After graduating from the University of Derby in 2014, Zak joined the PC Format and Maximum PC team as its resident staff writer. Specializing in PC building, and all forms of hardware and componentry, he soon worked his way up to editor-in-chief, leading the publication through the covid dark times. Since then, he’s dabbled in PR, working for Corsair for a while as its UK PR specialist, before returning to the fold as a tech journalist once again.
He now operates as a freelance tech editor, writing for all manner of publications, including PC Gamer, Maximum PC, Techradar, Gamesradar, PCGamesN, and Trusted Reviews as well. If there’s something happening in the tech industry it’s highly likely Zak has a strong opinion on it.
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