Okay, so Samsung dropped something wild this week. The Odyssey G8 G80HS is officially the world’s first 6K gaming monitor, and I’ve been sitting with the news long enough to have some strong opinions. Spoiler: it’s impressive, it’s expensive, and it’s a little frustrating all at the same time.
Let’s start with what Samsung actually built. The G80HS is a 32-inch IPS panel pushing 6144 × 3456 resolution at 165 Hz. That’s six thousand horizontal pixels. For context, most people are still rocking 1440p setups. 4K is still considered premium. And here’s Samsung just casually skipping 5K entirely and planting a flag at 6K.
The pixel density lands around 218 PPI—comparable to your phone screen. Text is going to look razor sharp. If you’ve ever squinted at pixel edges on a 4K 32-inch display and thought “I can see you,” this monitor is the answer to that problem.
The Dual Mode feature is clever, too. You can drop down to 3K resolution and hit 330 Hz— o if you want to go full competitive mode and chase frames, you’ve got that option. It’s like having two monitors in one.
I like that Samsung is letting users decide how they want to use the panel rather than locking them into one use case.
But here’s where I start getting a little bit grumpy.
It’s IPS. No mini-LED. At $1,549, I expected more from the backlight situation. IPS panels have come a long way, but if you’ve been spoiled by deep contrast from a VA or the inky blacks of OLED, dropping this kind of money for a standard edge-lit IPS panel stings.
The contrast ratio is going to be what it is, and at this price point, Samsung had a real opportunity to pair that insane resolution with a more capable backlight solution. They chose not to, and I think that’s a miss.
It also makes me wonder about HDR performance. Real HDR requires high peak brightness and strong local dimming—neither of which a basic IPS backlight excels at.
If you’re buying this expecting a mind-blowing HDR gaming experience to go along with that stunning resolution, you might walk away feeling a little underwhelmed.
Now, the GPU question. Almost nobody’s PC can push 6K at a competitive framerate in demanding titles. Even with upscaling technologies, we’re talking about a level of hardware investment that goes well beyond the monitor itself.
The 6K mode at 165 Hz is gorgeous for productivity, content creation, and slower-paced games, but for fast-paced shooters or action RPGs where you need frames? You’ll likely be living in Dual Mode at 3K/330 Hz. Which is fine. That’s still a great experience. But it means for a lot of buyers, the headline resolution becomes more of a bragging right than something you’ll use day to day.
And speaking of everyday use—if you’re on a Mac, I’d pump the brakes before ordering. macOS has a historically rough relationship with high-resolution external displays, especially at higher refresh rates. The Apple Pro Display XDR is also a 6K display, and Apple still struggles with HiDPI options for it in some configurations. Throwing a third-party 6K panel into that ecosystem is going to be an adventure.
Here’s what I actually think the G80HS is great for: video editors who want to play back 4K footage at native resolution and still have room on screen for their timeline and tools. Designers who want pixel-perfect clarity. Power users who just want the sharpest desktop experience possible and are willing to pay for it. For those people, this monitor is probably close to endgame.
For gamers specifically? It’s more complicated.
The resolution is a flex. The Dual Mode is useful. DisplayPort 2.1 is the right call for future-proofing. AMD FreeSync and NVIDIA G-Sync compatibility mean no one gets left out. HDR10+ GAMING with real-time brightness and contrast optimization is a nice touch.
But the lack of mini-LED and the steep price leave me feeling like this is a 1.0 version of what a 6K gaming monitor should eventually be.
Samsung took the second spot in the OLED gaming monitor market in 2025, and the OLED G8 models in this same lineup are exciting. Somehow, the star of the show—the 6K IPS panel—feels like it should’ve gone further.
I want to love this monitor unconditionally. I really do. The resolution milestone is real, the pixel density is impressive, and the Dual Mode flexibility is smart engineering. But $1,549 for an IPS panel with no mini-LED in 2026 is a tough sell when the rest of the market is moving toward better local dimming solutions.
Samsung proved 6K gaming monitors can exist. Now I want them to prove one should exist—at a price that makes sense and with the backlight technology to back it up.
Related: CES 2026: Top 5 gaming monitors I loved, including glasses-free 3D