Why LG’s Dual-Mode Displays Win Now

LG’s new Evo monitors are pitched as three paths to the same goal: one screen that can handle work and play without trade-offs. I think one of them actually gets there. The 39-inch GX9 OLED, with its flexible refresh and smart curve, is the sweet spot. It offers high clarity when you need detail and raw speed when you want wins. That balance matters more than sheer size or pixel bragging rights.

The Case For Balance Over Bragging Rights

The best monitor today should switch roles without friction. That is the promise running through this lineup. The presenter kept returning to a single feature that changes the game: dual-mode performance across resolutions. It shows up in two of the models and shapes the whole pitch.

“You can select for maximum resolution at 165 Hz, or you can go for 330 Hz at QHD… you don’t really have to compromise.”

The 27-inch GM9 nails clarity. It’s a 5K mini LED at 5120 by 2880 on a compact canvas. The pixel density lands at 218 PPI and brightness hits 1250 nits. That’s serious punch for photo work or tight editing.

“When you put 5K on a 27-inch you end up with an incredibly sharp image.”

Meanwhile, the 39-inch GX9 leans into OLED’s strengths without the usual fear. LG’s fourth-generation tandem OLED aims to keep brightness high, up to 1500 nits, while easing burn-in worries. The gentle 1500R curve is tuned for desk use, not just gaming flash.

“This is the world’s first 39-inch 5K2K OLED… with a slightly more subtle curvature… arguably a little more productive.”

Then there’s the huge 52-inch G9. It’s VA, not OLED or mini LED. It chases scale, a 1000R wrap, and 240 Hz. It skips dual mode. This one wants to be your monitor and your TV in one shot.

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What Actually Matters Day to Day

Upscaling is a quiet win. A new processor promises cleaner jumps from 1080p to these higher canvases. That helps when your favorite game or console can’t feed a native 5K signal.

“Turning a 1080p signal into a 5K image… you’re still going to receive some of the advantages.”

Inputs and power are handled like a modern hub. HDMI 2.1, DisplayPort 2.1, and USB‑C with 90W power delivery show up across the range. That means one cable charging for many laptops and cleaner desks. G‑Sync compatibility is part of the story too, smoothing frames when the GPU dips.

Why I’d Pick the GX9

I want one screen that feels great at both 165 Hz in full 5K and 300+ frames at a lower res. The GX9 does that while keeping colors and contrast that pop for creative work. The 1500R curve keeps the edges usable for spreadsheets and timelines. I don’t need the 52-inch size on a desk. I also don’t want to give up dual mode.

  • 39-inch 5K2K OLED with up to 1500 nits keeps HDR lively and text crisp.
  • Dual mode: 165 Hz at full 5K or roughly 330 Hz at WFHD for esports speed.
  • 1500R curve hits a comfort zone for daily tasks, racing games, and films.
  • USB‑C with 90W PD plus HDMI 2.1 and DP 2.1 fit any setup.

Yes, the 27-inch GM9 is the pixel-peeper’s dream. If you retouch photos at actual size and love mini LED highlights, it’s a killer choice. And the 52-inch G9 makes sense if your desk is a couch. Movies, consoles, and a single giant screen? That buyer exists, and this fills that need.

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The Weak Spots And Why They Don’t Break The Deal

OLED anxiety lingers for some. The presenter addressed it head-on, noting improvements in stability and the tandem stack. Mini LED plays it safer on that front, but it gives up OLED’s inky blacks. The 52-inch VA trades picture finesse and dual mode for size and a deep curve. If you sit close, that curve can feel heavy in office apps.

My take: versatility beats extremes. The GX9 isn’t the sharpest per inch or the biggest. It’s the one that adapts best.

Final Thought

I want a display that shifts with my day without a settings maze. The GX9 delivers that promise. If you value speed and fidelity in one frame, pick flexibility first. Try dual mode. Test the curve. And choose the screen that upgrades both your work and your wins.


Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which model suits mixed work and gaming best?

The 39-inch GX9 balances clarity and speed. It runs 5K at 165 Hz for detail and switches to very high refresh at lower resolution for competitive play.

Q: Is the 27-inch GM9 better for photo and video editing?

Yes. Its 5K resolution on a 27-inch panel gives very tight pixel density and strong mini LED brightness, which helps with fine retouching and HDR checks.

Q: Who should consider the 52-inch G9?

Choose the G9 if you want one oversized screen as a monitor-TV hybrid. It favors immersion, console use, and a bit more viewing distance over desk work.

Q: Do these displays handle lower-resolution inputs well?

They use an updated processor for cleaner upscaling. A 1080p or QHD source still looks sharp, which helps with older games and consoles.

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Q: What connections and charging options are included?

Each model offers HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 2.1, plus USB‑C that can deliver up to 90 watts, letting many laptops charge through a single cable.

joe_rothwell
Journalist at DevX

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