Samsung is reportedly preparing to launch five OLED gaming monitors across the first half of 2026. While most use familiar QD-OLED panels, one stands out an unexpected shift to LG Display’s WOLED tech. If true, it would mark Samsung’s first use of a white OLED panel for gaming, setting the stage for a more diverse OLED portfolio.
WOLED gaming monitor may use LG’s 4K/165Hz panel

According to early leaks, the model in question is the S27HG702WC. This 27-inch monitor is said to use a panel sourced from LG Display, rather than Samsung’s in-house QD-OLED tech. It supports 4K at 165Hz and includes Dual Mode functionality that allows for 1080p at 330Hz mirroring features found in LG’s UltraGear OLED 32GX850A.
While Samsung and LG are rivals in display tech, the move suggests Samsung Electronics may be open to leveraging LG panels when their own QD-OLED roadmap doesn’t fit the spec needs.
The rest of Samsung’s OLED lineup sticks with QD-OLED
The remaining four models appear to rely on Samsung Display’s Gen 3 and Gen 4 QD-OLED panels. Surprisingly, there’s no mention of Gen 5 panels suggesting that next year’s OLED lineup may not push refresh rates or contrast beyond current limits.
Here’s the rumored 2026 release schedule:
- Week 1 – S27FG604SC: 27-inch 2K/500Hz QD-OLED, with fewer ports than Odyssey OLED 602SC
- Week 6 – S27HG612SC: 27-inch 2K/240Hz QD-OLED, basic stand, no swivel or height adjustment
- Week 17 – S27HG802SC & S32HG802SC: 27- and 32-inch 4K/240Hz QD-OLEDs with USB-C 90W and DisplayPort 2.1
- Week 20 – S27HG702WC: 27-inch 4K/165Hz WOLED with 1080p/330Hz Dual Mode
What sets the WOLED gaming monitor apart from the rest
The key difference lies in panel type. QD-OLED displays use quantum dots for color filtering, while WOLED uses a white OLED base with color filters on top. LG’s panels tend to offer lower power consumption and cost but can differ in color vibrancy and image retention.
If Samsung’s WOLED gaming monitor delivers performance on par with QD-OLED models, it could signal a shift in strategy or at least a willingness to explore mixed sourcing to hit competitive specs.
Samsung’s WOLED gaming monitor could reshape the OLED rivalry
Using a rival’s panel isn’t something Samsung does lightly. But in the race to deliver high-performance gaming displays with wider market reach, pragmatism may win out over brand purity. If the S27HG702WC succeeds, it won’t just be a product launch, it’ll be a signal that OLED’s next phase will be defined by flexibility, not loyalty.

