
Not only is it more expensive, but the screen size is smaller and only sports a 3440x1440 resolution, which equates to 40% less pixels. Dell also has a 34" Alienware QD-OLED that sells for $1200. Mini LED is a different technology with its own set of advantages and disadvantages, but it is certainly not a superior technology to OLED, and definitely not worth the ridiculous $900 price premium. It has a 5120x1440 resolution, which is technically 11% less pixels than a true 4K TV. It's closest competitors are something like the 48" Samsung Neo G9 Mini LED sells for $1450 on Amazon. You won't find a gaming monitor under $1K that can beat the LG Evo C2 in terms of image quality. As always, OLED panel blows away any IPS, VA, or TN monitor in terms of HDR, black levels and color rendition. Previously reserved only for the LG G-series OLED TVs, the Evo panel offers higher brightness levels, one of the few areas that traditional LED LCD TVs have OLEDs beat. The new 2022 C2 model has an improved "Evo" OLED panel over the C1. The new C2 model introduces native GeForce Now and Stadia streaming support. It also boasts 4:4:4 chroma sampling for clear, sharp text as well as sub-1ms response times, ALLM, and native G-SYNC compatibility for zero tearing and ghosting. It has HDMI 2.1 ports and supports 4K 120Hz and VRR when paired with a PS5, Xbox Series X, opr RTX 30 series equipped PC. The 42" size fits gaming desks better than the 48", which admittedly is still a bit too large, especially since most of us sit only a few feet away from our monitors.

It performs just as well as its larger sized siblings as a gaming TV, but where it really shines is as a gaming monitor for your PC.

The 42" replaces LG's 48" as its smallest 4K OLED TV on the market.
