OLED has been one of the clearest upgrades gaming monitors have received in years, but the problem has always been the price. Cutting-edge OLED gaming monitors have mostly lived in enthusiast territory, especially if you wanted a panel larger than 30 inches. Dell’s Alienware is now making that jump a little easier with its new 34-inch ultrawide QD-OLED gaming monitor, the AW3426DW.
The monitor was first shown at CES 2026 and is now available as part of Alienware’s 30th-anniversary lineup, alongside two more affordable VA models. At $799.99, the AW3426DW is still expensive, but for a 34-inch ultrawide with a 5-stack Penta Tandem QD-OLED panel, the price is lower than expected.
So what does this $800 monitor offer?
The AW3426DW uses a 34-inch 3440 x 1440 ultrawide QD-OLED panel with a 21:9 aspect ratio and an 1800R curve. Its 5-stack QD-OLED Penta Tandem panel can hit 1,300 nits of peak HDR brightness, up from 1,000 nits on the previous generation.
There is also a new anti-reflective coating that reduces reflectance by 30 percent, which should help blacks look deeper in brighter rooms. For daily use, the bigger improvement may be the RGB stripe subpixel layout. QD-OLED monitors have often struggled with text clarity, and Alienware says this new layout delivers its cleanest text yet on a QD-OLED panel.
The gaming specs are also strong. You get a 280Hz refresh rate, up from 240Hz, along with a 0.03ms gray-to-gray response time. The monitor supports VESA DisplayHDR True Black 500, Dolby Vision, Nvidia G-Sync Compatible, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, and VESA AdaptiveSync. Dell is also including a three-year warranty that covers OLED burn-in.
What about the cheaper models?

Alongside the OLED model, Alienware has also launched two more affordable VA monitors. The AW3426DWM is a 34-inch 3440 x 1440 ultrawide monitor with a 1500R curve, 240Hz refresh rate, 1ms response time, and a $399.99 price.

The AW3226DM is the cheapest of the three at $299.99. It uses a 32-inch 2560 x 1440 curved VA panel and also runs at 240Hz with a 1ms response time. Both VA monitors support AMD FreeSync Premium, VESA AdaptiveSync, Dolby Vision, VESA DisplayHDR 400, and TÜV-certified low blue light hardware.
The OLED model is clearly the main attraction in this lineup, and for good reason. The two VA models still make sense if you want a large 1440p gaming monitor without spending too much, especially since both offer 240Hz refresh rates. That said, there are cheaper ways to get into OLED. Buyers who do not need a 34-inch curved ultrawide can find cheaper options, such as a 27-inch 1440p QD-OLED monitor from AOC, which sometimes drops to around $350. You lose the bigger ultrawide format, but you still get the core OLED benefits for a lot less money.
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