From laptops to monitors, HyperX is the brand you’ll see on much of HP’s new gaming-focused products launched at CES 2026. And despite the branding switch, this year’s slate of monitors might be the company’s most competitive batch yet.
The cheapest of the three QD-OLEDs announced is the HyperX Omen OLED 27q, a 27-inch 1440p model with a 240Hz refresh rate and variable refresh rate with Nvidia G-Sync compatibility, plus AMD FreeSync Premium. It has a DisplayPort 1.4 input, two HDMI 2.1 ports, and a headphone jack. It’ll ship with an adjustable stand (supporting height, tilt, swivel, and pivot tweaks), though it has a 100 x 100mm VESA mount for folks who’d prefer to use a monitor arm. HP hasn’t shared official pricing, but it told The Verge that it should cost around $400, which is a great price point for these specs.
Next is a similarly sized, yet more cutting-edge, 27-inch model called the Omen 27qs. It bumps the refresh rate up to 500Hz and is HP’s first monitor to don its new HyperX ProLuma branding for factory color calibration. It has an average Delta E less than one, so it should be more color-accurate than the Omen 27q or any other monitor that advertises an average Delta E less than two.
Moving on, it also adds a USB-C video port with 100W PD power passthrough, plus a KVM switch via a dedicated button on the bottom of the monitor. Other ports include USB-B data upstream and two USB-A 3.2 Gen 1 downstream. This display boasts HDR support and FreeSync Premium Pro, and it has VESA’s ClearMR 21000 certification that provides some assurance that the monitor doesn’t exhibit gnarly motion blur at high refresh rates. HP hasn’t yet provided a price for this model.
HP also has a curved ultrawide QD-OLED coming out called the Omen 34-inch OLED. It’s a WQHD 21:9 display (3,440 x 1,440 resolution) with a 360Hz refresh rate that’ll cost $1,199. Like the 27qs, it has HyperX ProLuma color calibration, a dedicated KVM button, and a VESA ClearMR 21000 rating. It also has the same port selection, but it might be worth considering if you want all of those specs (sans 500Hz refresh rate) in a 1800R curved screen. Something noteworthy here is this model has V-Strip QD-OLED. It was implemented as a measure to prevent text from appearing fringed with the curved OLED screen.
Lastly, the only non-OLED monitor that HP is introducing is a 23.8-inch 1080p model called the HyperX Omen G2. It has an IPS screen with a respectable 180Hz refresh rate, and it’s clear from the specs that this is meant to be HP’s affordable model that it hopes entry-level gamers who don’t have a huge budget will snag at stores. It has two HDMI 2.0 ports, one DisplayPort 1.4 input, and a headphone jack. Its only advertised adaptive sync tech is AMD FreeSync.
We’re still waiting for official pricing for some of these models, and HP hasn’t shared exact release dates, but it mentions in a press release that the curved 34-inch OLED will be available in the spring.
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