










🔥 Elevate your game with MSI’s blazing-fast, ultra-vivid QD-OLED powerhouse!
The MSI MPG 341CQPX QD-OLED is a 34-inch ultrawide curved gaming monitor featuring a cutting-edge QD-OLED panel with 3440x1440 UWQHD resolution, 0.03ms response time, and a 240Hz refresh rate. It delivers exceptional HDR 400 True Black visuals with deep contrast and vibrant colors. Designed for professionals and gamers alike, it includes advanced OLED Care 2.0 technology to minimize burn-in, versatile connectivity options including HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB-C, and ergonomic adjustments for optimal comfort. This monitor blends stunning picture quality with high-performance specs to keep you ahead in fast-paced environments.











| ASIN | B0D685SYKN |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 194,304 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 3,180 in Monitors |
| Brand | MSI |
| Colour | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (189) |
| Date First Available | 8 Oct. 2024 |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item Weight | 12.4 kg |
| Item model number | MPG 341CQPX QD-OLED |
| Manufacturer | MSI |
| Number of HDMI Ports | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 31.8 x 81.2 x 42.72 cm; 12.43 kg |
| Resolution | 3440 x 1440 |
| Screen Resolution | 3440x1440 |
| Series | MSI MAG 341CQPX QD-OLED |
| Standing screen display size | 34 Inches |
K**S
Easy to recommend, with some caveats
I'm very pleased with this monitor so far, having had it for a week. Playing through the intro to Horizon: Forbidden West, in glorious HDR, is simply incredible. Even the HDR demos on youtube leave me with my jaw to the floor. What surprised me the most was all the things that reviews of QD-OLED monitors warn you about, and how those turned out to be nothing, at least for me. - HDR on at all times I'm using Windows 11, and a GPU that supports HDMI 2.1 (with a 2.1 certified cable). The internet says that HDR needs to be off for SDR (ie standard) content, but I am finding that is not the case at all. I have it on all the time, and everything looks perfect to me. The HDR effect is noticeable in most things, and as far as I can tell, the colour accuracy is also there (caveat: I'm no expert). I went through the Windows HDR Calibration app later, and it claims to have improved the highlights. I had no complaints before, so, yay. - Brightness I don't understand what people are talking about when they say that QD-OLED technology is not bright enough. I have mine set to True Black 400, and it's plenty bright. I find I'm reaching for the dark modes in apps even more aggressively than before, since a sudden white screen (eg a website, or Excel) is almost too much for me :). Tip: look for a Chrome extension that automatically turns most websites to dark mode. - Text clarity I had forgotten that this was even something I was supposed to worry about. It was days later that I remembered about it, and I went looking for it. I still cannot see the problem, at all. White text everywhere has a healthy white glow to it (compared to my old IPS monitor - I don't mean actual backlight bleed or anything), which ought to improve clarity if anything. - 1800R curve Having been used to 3400R for 9 years, I thought 1800R might be too much for me. That has not been the case at all, thankfully. I don't even notice the difference, most of the time. 1800R is very pleasing, and might even be the new sweet spot for me. - Reflections in a bright room / pink tint This just hasn't been an issue for me at all. If anything, the situation is better than my old monitor. However, I am usually in a dark room, and the monitor is facing away from the window. Plus, I have dark curtains. Other easily solvable issues: - 110 vs 240 volts (power input) I ordered the monitor from Amazon US, but I live in the UK. Luckily, I had no problems with the mains voltage difference. As stated in the manual, the monitor supports both kinds. I used a UK power cable from another monitor, and that was it. - The sockets at the back are placed too low, for some reason. I have the monitor on a flexible arm, and I need it to be almost at desk level (long story). That problem was easily solved with angled adaptors, like https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00T2TP7VM and https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0BGJ96WHY. - I used to use VLC as a video player for most things. It seems the current public version has a bug with the rendering of the subtitles in HDR. I now recommend switching to MPC-BE. It seems better in a lot of ways, so far. Speaking of VLC or MPC-BE, they both play back my own HDR videos beautifully. Both those from my phone (with HDR on) and my camera (HLG mode). Even my photos from my phone look much more pleasing on this monitor. It's not all positives though. The risk of burn-in is still something to be taken seriously, by all accounts. My experience so far with MSI OLED Care 2.0, and Panel Protect specifically, has been mixed. On the one hand, I got the first popup after 4 hours, and I easily dismissed it with a click of the mouse (via the Gaming Intelligence app). For a few days, I didn't hear from it again, and I even wondered if it's working at all. Of course, even though I switch all my devices off at night, I make sure not to switch this monitor off at all. I can confirm via the monitor's built-in menu (not sure why the Intelligence app doesn't show this) that Panel Protect has been running, seemingly once a day. Great, I thought. However, I work from home, and sometimes that means the monitor is on for 8 hours for work, and 8 more for my own entertainment in the evening. That's 16 hours, which is the maximum you can go without running Panel Protect. Two nights in a row, it interrupted me during a film :(. That was NOT a great experience. It takes about 6-8 mins, and you can do nothing while it's running. If it ever happens in the middle of some multiplayer game, I'll be extremely annoyed! So, I have started building a habit of manually running it at the start of my lunch breaks, while I prepare food or whatever. That seems like a good compromise. I wish they had a setting to force the protection at 24 hours, or even 18. 16 is just at the limit for me, sadly. (EDIT: see below) Having said all that, I was thoroughly warned about the issues with burn-in, from all the online reviews, and I expected to face these problems. It is just a limitation of the technology, and we just need to accept it really. If this is the only problem I will ever face, I'll be very happy, considering the amazing picture quality I get. One related thing that worried me before I bought the monitor was all the Chrome tabs I tend to keep open, usually for months. I even have pinned tabs that are permanently there. Everything else was solvable, with things like hiding the Windows taskbar, switching to dark mode for everything, ensuring the screensaver is active, setting Windows to go to sleep after a bit, etc. There was no solution for the Chrome tabs though. In the end, I did some research, and found that Vivaldi (a Chrome-based browser, therefore easy to switch to it) supports customisation of its window. Some kind person on their forums wrote a script that will auto-hide the tab bar in Vivaldi, much like Windows can auto-hide its taskbar. Search for "AutoHide Tab Bar + Address Bar | Show on Hover". It's not perfect, and you have to keep reinstalling it every week, when Vivaldi updates itself, but it solves the problem. I don't know how the problem of burn-in will play out in the long term. I will try to remember to update this review, if I ever notice this problem (or any others). Meanwhile, I take comfort from people's burn-in experiments, eg on youtube. Another issue I noticed, which I was also warned about, is VRR flicker. At least I think that's what it is. I've not noticed it in games so far, only in Windows. I have the monitor set to 120 Hz for every day use, and I use the Windows 11 setting called Dynamic Refresh Rate (Settings > Display > Advanced display). With that, whenever Windows is idling, the refresh rate drops to 60 Hz, which is great in theory. However, with the slightest mouse movement or screen scrolling, the refresh rate instantly switches to 120 for a bit. I think that results in noticeably increased smoothness, but it also seems to cause this almost imperceptible flicker, sometimes. It's only really noticeable in dark or gray backgrounds. Once you notice it, it's hard to unsee, unfortunately. Well, there are easy solutions: stick with either 120 Hz at all times, or 60 Hz (and only switch up for games), or ignore it. I haven't decided yet. Hopefully it will be as easily solvable in games, if I ever experience it. Overall, I'm assigning 4 stars to this monitor, easily. I'm subtracting one mostly for the amount of effort I had to go through to solve the issue with the Chrome tabs. I'm glad there is a solution to that though, and I can now easily recommend this monitor to most people. UPDATE (4 months later): - There is now a firmware update that raises the forced OLED Care period to 24h, which is ideal I would say. Phew. I still have to worry about turning my PC off for just a bit, in case I'll come back to it 5 mins later and the monitor will have started the panel refresh thing in the middle of the day. Overall though, it is now something I just don't worry about anymore. It will never interrupt me again the middle of a film or game. Thanks for listening, MSI! - No signs of burn in so far. Not that I've gone looking, but it's hopefully way too early to worry about this. - I've had a stuck pixel, 3 weeks in... :( I decided to return the monitor and get a replacement, and so far, it hasn't happened again. Here's hoping it will stay that way. - I've switched to 60Hz permanently, while in Windows. No flickering this way. I have a script that I use to launch my games, which turns the refresh rate to 120Hz, and then automatically back to 60Hz after I exited the game. Problem solved. - I've switched to Peak 1000 mode, for now. I go back and forth on whether this is better and more accurate... On the one hand, HDR-aware apps that query the monitor's capabilities (eg MPC-BE), always seem to think that the monitor can do 1000 nits, and so they adjust their output accordingly, not knowing that the monitor is set to 400 nits (True Black 400). This results in over-bright highlights, ie lost detail. It was obvious with my camera's HLG videos. Peak 1000 solves this issue, and maybe it also improves things in games and films, not that I had noticed problems there. Unfortunately, Peak 1000 does not result in a consistent output... The monitor CONSTANTLY adjusts its output, presumably because it can't maintain true 1000 nits for very long (even if it's only advertised for 10% of the screen). This results in a very obvious "pulsing" of the overall brightness, which is fast enough to ruin the experience. This pulsing happened once as I was writing this update to my review, even though there was no obvious reason for it. Normally, you can tell it happens because of switching from a dark to a bright web page, for example, which I still find distracting. I miss the stability and consistency/uniformity of True Black 400... I may go back to it, and just try to remember to switch to Peak 1000 when I watch content or play games. If only there was a command line tool that could automate the switch... Man, first world problems are the worst ;)
H**R
Very good and bright panel, as one would frankly expect from an OLED. Also it does have the VRR flickering issue that all oleds seem to have, as it’s innate to the technology. So do yr research which panel tech is best for your needs. Positive surprise is the feature rich menu of the panel and the software that can also setup the panel. E.g I didn’t expect Adobe RGB profile on a gaming monitor! Only downside I would mention is the oled care of MSI is a bit intrusive, and could be smarter (it cannot be programmed e.g to run every night). I never had this come up with my oled TV, but I suppose static pc content increases the risk of burn in. So hopefully it preserves the panel’s quality.l, in which case it’s a fair trade off against the amazing oled screen quality. Just be mindful of these drawbacks when going from IPS to OLED..
L**K
Outstanding monitor with stunning QD-OLED image quality—deep blacks, vibrant colors, and excellent HDR. The 240Hz refresh rate makes gaming incredibly smooth with no noticeable motion blur, and the 3440×1440 ultrawide resolution is very immersive. Solid build quality and good connectivity. OLED care features add peace of mind. Premium price, but absolutely worth it.
J**Z
Lo pedí un par de veces en Amazon mx, tarda mucho en llegar, soy desesperado y mejor por importación a EU, Tiene muchas configuraciones, recomiendo desactivar G-sync, para dejar detección de logos, de barra de tareas, detección de limites, pantalla estática. para uso común HDR 400 perfecto, si ves videos oscuros o conciertos (tomorrowland, asot, cosas nocturnas el HDR 100 nits max), es una pantalla espectacular, para juegos, para uso cotidiano es lo mejor, queria tener 2 monitores Uwide, pero la calidad es tan diferente que prefiero quedarme solo con este y dejar el IPS igual de MSI UWIDE
B**Z
Si compras el monitor y puedes esperar a que te llegue porque tarda un poco en llegar, hazlo, vale totalmente la pena, el OLED en estos monitores es otro nivel, me preocupaba las barras negras a la hora de ver contenido multimedia que no es compatible con el formato UW pero la verdad es que no se nota para nada ya que al ser OLED apaga por completo y no se notan esas líneas, para juegos, es una delicia el formato UW y la calidad de los colores ni se diga, siempre había jugado en 27" o 32" ahora que pude probar este UW se me hará muy difícil volver a una resolución de 27" o 32" , principalmente porque los problemas que podías experimentar en los UW ips casi son imperceptibles ahora con la tecnología OLED, vale cada centavo este monitor, sin duda se los recomiendo antes que cualquier otro UW OLED msi se caracteriza por hacer productos de muy alta calidad
E**E
I just got this monitor today, and I’m really happy with it so far. After reading a lot of reviews and waiting for a good deal, I finally decided to pick it up, and it’s been great overall. Most of the details about this monitor have already been covered, so I’ll just touch on a few common concerns. Text clarity hasn’t been an issue for me at all on macOS. At normal scaling, text looks clean and sharp, and I haven’t noticed any problems related to the subpixel layout during regular use. Out of the box, the monitor was set to Eco mode, which didn’t look great to me at first. After switching out of Eco and adjusting the brightness and picture settings, the image quality improved a lot. Once dialed in, it looks fantastic, and I’m honestly in love with it now. I haven’t noticed any flickering or sync-related issues during general use or media playback on my MacBook Pro. Everything feels smooth and responsive. The OLED care notification did appear after a few hours of continuous use, but I deferred it and it ran later when the monitor went to sleep, so it hasn’t interrupted my workflow so far. Overall, first impressions are very positive. After a bit of setup, the image quality really shines, and any downsides so far have been minor.
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