Mis à jour en 2026
After running 92 1440p gaming monitors through our latency, colour, and HDR tests, the MSI MAG 275QPF takes the top spot. The wider story: rapid IPS at 300+ Hz is now baseline tech, and refresh rates that cost $700 in 2024 now sit under $150.
1440p gaming monitors are scored on response time (measured with a photodiode), refresh rate, panel uniformity, colour gamut coverage (sRGB and DCI-P3), HDR implementation, FreeSync/G-Sync compatibility, input lag, and per-pixel pricing. We penalise marketing claims that don't match measured numbers.
Best overall. MSI's 275QPF X30 hits 300 Hz on a rapid IPS panel at $150 — a combination that simply didn't exist last cycle. 1ms GtG, FreeSync Premium, and DisplayHDR 400 certification. The new baseline for esports buyers.
Best premium 1440p. Gigabyte's 27-inch 300 Hz OC IPS at $204 ships with KVM, USB-C 65W power delivery, and a more accurate factory calibration than competitors at twice the price. The pick for sim-racers or anyone running multi-source setups.
Best 4K hybrid. MSI's MAG 275UPD E14 at $399 is technically 4K but downsamples to 1440p cleanly for esports. A future-proof pick for buyers who want one monitor for both single-player AAA at 4K60 and competitive titles at 1440p120.
The MSI MAG 275QPF X30 leads our 2026 ranking with a 78/100 score. It delivers 300 Hz refresh, rapid IPS 1ms response, FreeSync Premium, and DisplayHDR 400 at $150 — outperforming most $400+ models from 2024.
Yes, on 27-inch and larger displays. Pixel density at 1080p on a 27-inch screen becomes visibly soft; 1440p restores sharpness without the GPU cost of 4K. For most gamers, 1440p at 144+ Hz is the 2026 sweet spot.
144 Hz vs 240 Hz is a noticeable upgrade if your GPU can sustain frame rates that high. 240 Hz vs 360 Hz is only meaningful for elite competitive players in titles where every frame matters. Most buyers should pick 165-240 Hz.
IPS leads on response time, colour accuracy, and viewing angles — best all-rounder. VA has deeper blacks and higher contrast but slower response (better for movies, worse for competitive). OLED has near-zero response time and infinite contrast but burn-in risk on static UI elements.
Reviewed by VersusMatrix Editorial Team
Last updated: May 13, 2026
Methodology: AI-powered analysis of technical specifications from manufacturer data. Scores are calculated by comparing products across multiple dimensions and normalized relative to the full category database. Our editorial process is independent and not influenced by affiliate partnerships.