Computers

    Samsung Odyssey G90XH 6K OLED gaming monitor with 165Hz and glasses-free 3D appears

    Samsung Odyssey G90XH debuts as a 6K OLED gaming monitor with 165Hz refresh rate and glasses-free 3D ahead of CES 2026.
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    Samsung has revealed one of its most unusual displays yet with the Samsung Odyssey G90XH. The gaming monitor combines full 6K resolution, a fast 165Hz refresh rate, and glasses-free 3D playback in a single panel. Although the official debut is set for CES 2026 in early January, Samsung has already shared key details. The early reveal signals confidence in a product that sits far outside the typical gaming monitor formula.

    Samsung-Odyssey-G90XH-2

    The new model replaces the earlier Odyssey 3D G90FX and arrives with noticeable upgrades. Screen size grows from 27 inches to 32 inches. Resolution jumps from 4K to 6K. That places the monitor in rare company, matching the pixel count used by Apple’s Pro Display XDR.

    Despite the higher resolution, Samsung avoids the usual trade-offs seen at this level. The panel still reaches a 165Hz refresh rate, which keeps motion smooth during fast gameplay. This combination targets users who want both clarity and speed rather than choosing one over the other.

    Samsung G60H gaming monitor features ultra-fast 1,040Hz refresh rate, Odyssey OLED G8 also announced

    Samsung adds flexibility through a Dual Mode feature. When enabled, the refresh rate can double to 330Hz. The cost comes in resolution, which drops by roughly half. Even then, the effective image remains sharp thanks to the high starting pixel count.

    In Dual Mode, the resolution sits around 3008 x 1692 pixels. That figure stays well above standard 1440p. Competitive players may welcome the option, especially in titles where frame rate matters more than raw detail.

    The standout feature remains the 3D capability. Unlike older solutions, this monitor does not require glasses. Instead, a built-in camera tracks the user’s eyes and adjusts the image in real time. This setup tailors the 3D effect to a single viewer.

    That approach allows convincing depth even when the user shifts position slightly. The limitation is clear, though. Only one viewer can experience the 3D effect properly at a time. Still, for personal gaming setups, that trade-off feels reasonable.

    Samsung is not treating the 3D feature as a tech demo. The company is working directly with developers to tune games for the display. Confirmed titles include:

    • The First Berserker Khazan
    • Lies of P Overture
    • Stellar Blade

    This curated support suggests a controlled rollout rather than broad compatibility from day one.

    Pricing, release timing, and final specifications remain under wraps. Samsung plans to share those details at CES 2026. Until then, the Odyssey G90XH stands as a statement product. It blends resolution, speed, and 3D in ways few monitors attempt. Sometimes, pushing boundaries matters more than playing it safe.

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