Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

MSI’s next gaming monitor can morph between three different resolutions and refresh rates

Why buy three monitors when MSI wants you to buy one expensive one?

Add as a preferred source on Google
MSI MPG OLED 322URDX
MSI MPG OLED 322URDX MSI
Nvidia CEO showing the RTX 4060 Ti at Computex 2023.
This story is part of our coverage of Computex, the world's biggest computing conference.

Gaming monitors have slowly become one of the most aggressively competitive categories in PC hardware. Over the past few years, brands have raced to push refresh rates higher, improve OLED technology, reduce response times, and deliver increasingly brighter displays. But despite all those upgrades, buyers still usually have to pick one side of the experience. You either buy a super-fast esports monitor with lower resolution or a high-resolution OLED display focused more on cinematic gaming.

At Computex 2026, MSI appears to be trying to eliminate that compromise. The company has officially unveiled the MSI MPG OLED 322URDX36, which it describes as the world’s first triple-mode QD-OLED gaming monitor.

Recommended Videos

Instead of locking users into a single refresh rate and resolution combination, the monitor is designed to dynamically switch between different display modes depending on the type of game being played. It is a concept that reflects how modern gamers increasingly move between visually demanding AAA titles, competitive esports games, and productivity workloads on the same setup.

One monitor designed for different types of gaming

The biggest highlight of the new 31.5-inch monitor is its ability to switch between multiple resolution and refresh rate combinations depending on the user’s needs. Instead of forcing buyers to commit to one setup permanently, MSI allows the display to adapt dynamically.

The monitor can operate in three different modes. Users can run it at 4K resolution with a 240Hz refresh rate for visually intensive AAA games, switch to 1440p at 360Hz for a balance between image quality and speed, or move to Full HD at an extremely fast 500Hz refresh rate for competitive esports gaming.

This effectively turns the display into three different monitors in one package. Traditionally, gamers wanting both high visual quality and ultra-fast competitive performance often needed separate displays to achieve that balance.

The MPG OLED 322URDX36 uses Samsung Display’s latest QD-OLED technology, combining OLED-level contrast and near-instant response times with stronger brightness and colour performance. MSI says the panel supports VESA DisplayHDR True Black 500 certification and delivers a 0.03ms response time aimed at reducing motion blur during fast-paced gameplay.

The company is also leaning into AI-driven gaming tools. The monitor includes AI-assisted scene enhancement and adaptive crosshair systems designed to dynamically improve visibility depending on the game environment.

On the connectivity side, MSI has equipped the display with DisplayPort 2.1a, HDMI 2.1, and USB-C with power delivery support, making it suitable for gaming PCs, consoles, and productivity-focused setups.

Why this matters

The gaming monitor market has become increasingly fragmented in recent years. Some buyers prioritize ultra-high refresh rates for esports titles, while others care more about resolution and cinematic image quality for single-player games.

MSI’s triple-mode concept attempts to eliminate that trade-off. For users with powerful GPUs from NVIDIA or AMD, dynamically switching between different gaming modes could become genuinely useful rather than simply acting as a marketing gimmick.

The announcement also reflects how aggressively monitoring manufacturers are now experimenting with adaptive technologies instead of relying purely on incremental specification upgrades.

What happens next

MSI has not yet revealed pricing or availability for the MPG OLED 322URDX36. However, given the combination of QD-OLED technology, 500Hz support, and advanced connectivity features, the monitor is unlikely to target mainstream budgets.

Still, the larger industry trend is becoming increasingly clear. Gaming monitors are evolving into flexible performance devices capable of adapting to different gaming scenarios rather than serving a single fixed purpose.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
Sony’s next PlayStation could break free of the living room and I think it’s worth the risk
Component prices may be soaring, but Sony has more reasons than ever to take portable gaming seriously.
Sony PlayStation Handheld PS render image

Sony may have just dropped its biggest hint yet that a true PlayStation handheld is on the way. In a recently published Q&A with investors, Sony Interactive Entertainment CEO Hideaki Nishino said the company's next-generation PlayStation strategy will deliver a seamless gaming experience that extends "beyond the living room." While he never explicitly mentioned a handheld, the comments have once again fueled speculation that Sony is preparing to return to the portable gaming space with the PS6 generation.

Sony finally said what everyone was thinking

Read more
Xbox Game Pass deals are reportedly drying up, and that’s bad news for indies
Logo, Green, Recycling Symbol

Ask most players why they subscribe to Xbox Game Pass, and they'll probably mention day-one Xbox exclusives. But developers have long viewed the service differently. For many indie studios, a Game Pass deal wasn't just extra exposure — it was financial security before launch.

Landing a Game Pass deal often meant guaranteed revenue before a game even launched, reducing the financial gamble of releasing an indie title into an increasingly crowded market. Now, that safety net may not be as dependable as it once was.

Read more
I just played Ghost of Tsushima on a phone. I never thought I’d see this day and I’m not regretting this misadventure
Running Ghost of Tsushima on the Red Magic 11S Pro almost feels wrong
Red Magic 11S Pro running Ghost of Tsushima

I have tested plenty of gaming phones, but nothing quite prepared me for watching Ghost of Tsushima Director’s Cut boot up on the Red Magic 11S Pro. This was not cloud gaming or something like Remote Play from a PlayStation sitting somewhere else in the house. I used GameHub, linked it with Steam, and after some trial and error, had the PC version of Ghost of Tsushima running on a phone--and it was far more playable than I expected.

And yes, it looked as ridiculous as it sounds. Seeing Jin Sakai on a phone screen with a GameHub overlay, virtual shoulder buttons, and a live FPS counter sitting on top made the whole setup seem a lot more viable.

Read more