You know how you don’t really want something until you actually try it for yourself? That’s exactly what happened between me and the Samsung Odyssey G9. This beast of a monitor has been around for a few years, but I never gave it much thought until Samsung graciously let me try one.
Spoilers: I don’t know what I’ll do once they take it away.
The Odyssey G9 is billed as a gaming monitor, but I mostly used it for work. I genuinely didn’t expect a widescreen display to make a difference — but after spending a few weeks with it, I can’t imagine going back to a non-ultrawide setup. Not just for the visual real estate, but for how it quietly reshaped my workflow.
My usual PC workspace
For years, I’ve relied on the multiple desktop feature on both PC and Mac to organize how I work. One desktop is strictly for writing, research, and productivity. Another is reserved for the multiple chat apps I use on the daily: Telegram, Messenger, WhatsApp, and even Viber. And then there’s one for quick social breaks — Twitter, Instagram, or whatever flavor of distraction I need at the time.
It’s a neat, compartmentalized system that works well on smaller displays, and I was convinced this was the only way I could stay focused. Anything else, I thought, would only slow me down or break my rhythm.
Enter the Samsung Odyssey G9
To test the Odyssey G9, I had to fully rearrange my workspace just to make room for it. This thing is massive — and not in a gimmicky way. It’s a 49-inch ultrawide monitor with a 32:9 aspect ratio and an immersive 1000R curvature that wraps around your field of view. The model I tested was the LC49G95TSSNXDC, which runs on a QLED VA panel, supports HDR1000, and pushes a crisp 5120×1440 resolution at up to 240Hz refresh rate with a 1ms response time.
Specs aside, it’s one of those devices that just looks absurd… until you sit in front of it.
Having a larger and wider screen also rejuvenated my interest in video editing. Being able to see your canvas and timeline feels so refreshing. That’s especially true for someone who has mostly worked on a 13-inch display for the better part of a decade. Seeing everything clearly — layers, preview windows, audio tracks — without constantly zooming in and out felt like a game-changer.
I quickly discovered that with this much screen space, I didn’t need to isolate workspaces across desktops. Everything I needed could now exist in a single view. I still use multiple desktops, but not for segmentation — now they’re just extensions.
A productivity powerhouse
I can’t really show you what I usually work on so just think of this division as how I usually split my screen. STAYC Isa on the left for extra work things and sometimes YouTube. TWICE Momo in the middle for my main work things. And LE SSERAFIM Chaewon on the right for the multiple chat apps and socials.
Technically speaking, a 5120×1440 display is the same as having two 1440p monitors fused together — but without the physical bezels or the mess of dual-monitor cable management. That alone already makes it a more elegant solution.
Compared to a traditional two-monitor setup, the Odyssey G9 felt more cohesive and far less chaotic. I didn’t need to turn my head as much, and the 1000R curve actually helps reduce eye strain because it matches your natural field of vision.
Whether I was writing, editing timelines, cross-checking documents, or responding to messages, everything felt fluid. It’s one of those quality-of-life upgrades that doesn’t shout for attention but gradually seeps into your muscle memory — until it just feels wrong to go back.
Gaming
The Odyssey G9 was made for gaming, so of course I had to put that to the test. I primarily game on consoles, but thanks to PC ports with ultrawide support, I gave titles like Horizon Forbidden West and Stellar Blade a spin — the latter being my main obsession for a while.
At first, I didn’t know what to do with all that extra horizontal space. My attention stayed mostly in the center, and I ignored the wingspan of visuals stretching out to either side.
That changed once I loaded up RoboCop: Rogue City — a first-person shooter where I ditched the controller for a mouse-and-keyboard setup. That format, combined with the monitor’s wide field of view, took me right back to Counter-Strike LAN days. Only now, I could see so much more.
Peripheral vision matters in FPS games, and the Odyssey G9 gives you more of it. Enemies that would normally be out of sight pop into your awareness just enough to make a difference. Paired with the 240Hz refresh rate and FreeSync Premium Pro support, motion stays buttery smooth even during intense firefights.
Not a game but here’s what the pillarbox looks like. Watching Zoey from KPop Demon Hunters on Netflix.
Not all games support ultrawide, though. Some titles pillarbox to 16:9 or stretch awkwardly, so it’s worth checking compatibility if your primary use is gaming. But when games do support it? It’s like discovering an extra layer of immersion.
A second HDMI? Yes, please
Here’s what it kind of looks like with an even split of the screen. ITZY Ryujin on the left and ARTMS Heejin on the right.
One feature I didn’t fully take advantage of — but can totally see the value of — is the second HDMI port. The Odyssey G9 supports Picture-by-Picture (PBP), which means you can connect two devices and view them side-by-side on the same screen.
For most people, that could mean a PC and a console, or a laptop and a streaming box. For content creators or streamers, it might be monitoring a live chat on one side while editing or gaming on the other. And since the monitor auto-detects active inputs, it doesn’t take much fiddling to switch or toggle between them.
My workspace didn’t let me make full use of this, but it’s the kind of utility feature that can make a real difference for multitaskers and hybrid setups.
Is the Samsung Odyssey G9 your GadgetMatch?
I went into this expecting a cool gaming monitor — something flashy and impractical that I’d enjoy briefly and then move on from. Instead, I found myself rethinking how I work and how I play.
The Samsung Odyssey G9 isn’t a monitor for everyone. It’s large, pricey, and overkill for casual use. But if your time is split between work and play — especially if your work involves content creation, video editing, research-heavy tasks, or heavy multitasking — this is the kind of upgrade that can change how you see your workflow.
After spending time with it, even the idea of returning to a flat 16:9 panel feels limiting. Once you’ve had a taste of this kind of immersion, it’s hard to unsee it.
The Odyssey G9 didn’t just make gaming better. It made everything better. And now that I’ve had it in my space, I know one thing for sure: I’m going to miss it when it’s gone.