Samsung Odyssey OLED G8/G85SB S34BG85 Review (2025)

Design

Design

Style

Curved

Yes

Curve Radius

1800R

This monitor has a premium design, and it's made of black and silver plastic, with a slightly curved screen that helps bring its edges within your field of view. It also has RGB lighting on the back, and vents at the bottom.

Design

Accelerated Longevity Test

Uniformity Pictures

8.5

Design

Build Quality

The build quality is excellent. The plastic materials feel premium, and the stand is solid, but it doesn't prevent all wobble, as the screen wobbles if it's on an unstable desk. The one downside is that the bottom of the screen curves upward, but it's barely noticeable and doesn't impact performance.

6.7

Design

Ergonomics

Min Height To Top Of Panel

15.5" (39.3 cm)

Height Adjustment

4.7" (12.0 cm)

Tilt Range

-20° to 2.5°

Rotate Portrait/Landscape

No

Swivel Range

No swivel

Wall Mount

VESA 100x100

The Samsung G8 OLED offers limited ergonomics adjustments, making it hard to place it in an ideal position. It has an opening in the back of the stand for cable management. It hides the cables well, and you don't see them from the front.

Design

Stand

Base Width

7.2" (18.2 cm)

Base Depth

7.6" (19.3 cm)

Thickness (With Display)

5.3" (13.5 cm)

Weight (With Display)

16.7 lbs (7.6 kg)

Design

Display

Size

34"

Housing Width

32.1" (81.5 cm)

Housing Height

14.1" (35.7 cm)

Thickness (Without Stand)

2.2" (5.5 cm)

Weight (Without Stand)

12.2 lbs (5.5 kg)

Borders Size (Bezels)

0.4" (1.1 cm)

Design

Controls

The Samsung G8 comes with Tizen OS built-in, and you can change the settings with the included remote. There's a switch underneath the screen that allows you to mute the remote's microphone control and a power button on the back of the monitor.

Design

In The Box

Power Supply

External Brick

  • Mini DisplayPort to DisplayPort cable
  • Power supply and cable
  • Remote
  • VESA-mount adapter
  • User guides

Picture Quality

10

Picture Quality

Contrast

Native Contrast

Inf : 1

Contrast With Local Dimming

Inf : 1

The Samsung Odyssey G8 has a near-infinite contrast ratio, thanks to its OLED panel, which translates to deep and inky blacks next to bright highlights in dark rooms. However, blacks look purple in a bright room when there's light directly on the screen because it doesn't have a polarizer layer.

LEARN ABOUT CONTRAST

10

Picture Quality

Local Dimming

Local Dimming

No

Backlight

No Backlight

The Samsung G85SB doesn't have a backlight, so it doesn't require a local dimming feature. However, with a near-infinite contrast ratio, there isn't any blooming around bright objects, and it's the equivalent of a perfect local dimming feature. We still film these videos on the monitor so you can see how the screen performs and compare it with a monitor that has local dimming.

LEARN ABOUT LOCAL DIMMING

6.6

Picture Quality

SDR Brightness

Real Scene

230 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

249 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

242 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

243 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

242 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

243 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

247 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

240 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

241 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

240 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

241 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.002

Minimum Brightness

61 cd/m²

The Samsung Odyssey G8 has okay SDR brightness. It isn't bright enough to fight intense glare, but it at least maintains its brightness consistent across different content. Unfortunately, its minimum brightness is a bit high if you want to use the monitor in the dark and are sensitive to bright lights.

These results are from after calibration in the 'Custom' Picture Mode with Game Mode enabled. After updating it to firmware 1520, which Samsung released in Aug. 2023, you can no longer enable the Peak Brightness setting in SDR, but you could do so before the update. The monitor got much brighter with it on, reaching a Real Scene brightness of 331 cd/m². That said, you can still enable it in HDR, which is useful if you need to use it in a well-lit room.

LEARN ABOUT SDR BRIGHTNESS

6.6

Picture Quality

HDR Brightness

VESA DisplayHDR Certification

DisplayHDR TRUE BLACK 400

Real Scene

372 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

985 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

456 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

360 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

302 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

255 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

977 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

454 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

357 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

300 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

252 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.078

The Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 has reasonable HDR brightness. It gets bright enough to make small highlights stand out against dark backgrounds, but larger highlights aren't as bright due to its Automatic Brightness Limiter (ABL). This is most noticeable when minimizing and maximizing windows on the desktop, as you can see the brightness changing, but it isn't as distracting when watching content or playing games.

These results are with an HDMI connection using the settings below. Although we tested it with firmware 1421, it performs similarly with firmware 1442, which was released in Feb. 2023.

  • Game Mode: On
  • Picture Mode: Custom
  • Brightness: 50
  • Peak Brightness: On
  • Game HDR: Off
  • HDR10+ Gaming: Advanced

The HDR Real Scene brightness test is done using an HDFury Vertex Linker connected to a Blu-ray player over HDMI, but the screen doesn't get as bright using the same settings on the desktop in Windows HDR. However, it reaches a brightness of 885 cd/m² in Destiny 2 with Peak Brightness and HDR10+ Gaming both off and Game HDR on. Try using these settings if you find the screen too dim in Windows HDR.

Some users have reported that the brightness is limited over DisplayPort after firmware update 1622, but we can't currently test HDR brightness over DisplayPort due to equipment limitations to confirm that. If you find your monitor too dim, try connecting over HDMI.

The brightness results are also the same with an AMD or NVIDIA graphics card. However, you are locked out of certain settings when using an AMD graphics card with VRR on, like Game HDR. The screen is dimmer because of this, as we measured a brightness of 274 cd/m² in the 2% window in Windows HDR and 385 cd/m² in Destiny 2. If you're using an AMD graphics card and want the brightest image possible, you may have to disable VRR.

The Peak Brightness setting helps maximize the brightness of the display and makes the ABL less aggressive. You can see the results with it off below:

  • Peak 2% Window: 448 cd/m²
  • Peak 10% Window: 454 cd/m²
  • Peak 25% Window: 369 cd/m²
  • Peak 50% Window: 314 cd/m²
  • Peak 100% Window: 269 cd/m²
  • Sustained 2% Window: 447 cd/m²
  • Sustained 10% Window: 450 cd/m²
  • Sustained 25% Window: 366 cd/m²
  • Sustained 50% Window: 312 cd/m²
  • Sustained 100% Window: 265 cd/m²
  • As for the EOTF, it follows the target curve well until there's a slow roll-off at the peak brightness, so it tone maps before your computer does. It performs the same whether you have HDR10+ Gaming set to 'Basic' or 'Advanced.' There's also a separate setting called Game HDR that boosts the EOTF when enabled, as you can see here, but it doesn't change the brightness of the display.

    The EOTF performs similarly if you disable Peak Brightness and HDR10+ Gaming, but leave Game HDR on, as you can see here. There's a sharper roll-off at the peak brightness, so it lets highlights get the brightest they can, but the peak brightness of the display is lower, with the 2% window reaching 452 cd/m² and the 100% window reaching 285 cd/m². Additionally, the EOTF is darker if you disable both HDR10+ Gaming and Game HDR as you can see here.

    LEARN ABOUT HDR BRIGHTNESS

    10

    Picture Quality

    Horizontal Viewing Angle

    Color Washout From Left

    70°

    Color Washout From Right

    70°

    Color Shift From Left

    70°

    Color Shift From Right

    70°

    Brightness Loss From Left

    70°

    Brightness Loss From Right

    70°

    Black Level Raise From Left

    70°

    Black Level Raise From Right

    70°

    Gamma Shift From Left

    70°

    Gamma Shift From Right

    70°

    The monitor has a fantastic horizontal viewing angle. This means that someone sitting next to you sees the same image as from in front.

    LEARN ABOUT HORIZONTAL VIEWING ANGLE

    9.9

    Picture Quality

    Vertical Viewing Angle

    Color Washout From Below

    70°

    Color Washout From Above

    70°

    Color Shift From Below

    70°

    Color Shift From Above

    70°

    Brightness Loss From Below

    70°

    Brightness Loss From Above

    70°

    Black Level Raise From Below

    61°

    Black Level Raise From Above

    61°

    Gamma Shift From Below

    70°

    Gamma Shift From Above

    70°

    The vertical viewing angle is outstanding. The image remains consistent if you're standing up and looking down at the screen.

    LEARN ABOUT VERTICAL VIEWING ANGLE

    8.8

    Picture Quality

    Gray Uniformity

    50% Std. Dev.

    0.784%

    50% DSE

    0.125%

    The gray uniformity is amazing. There's no dirty screen effect, so web content, slow panning shots, and sports look good. However, like any OLED panel, there are thin vertical lines with near-blacks, but it isn't noticeable with most content. You can see more examples of this with the Dell Alienware AW3423DW review here.

    LEARN ABOUT GRAY UNIFORMITY

    10

    Picture Quality

    Black Uniformity

    Native Std. Dev.

    0.433%

    Std. Dev. w/ L.D.

    N/A

    Thanks to its OLED panel, the Samsung Odyssey G8 has exceptional black uniformity, so there's no blooming around bright objects.

    LEARN ABOUT BLACK UNIFORMITY

    8.0

    Picture Quality

    Color Accuracy (Pre-Calibration)

    Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    sRGB Gamut Area xy

    101.7%

    White Balance dE (Avg.)

    4.86

    Color Temperature (Avg.)

    6,759 K

    Gamma (Avg.)

    2.16

    Color dE (Avg.)

    3.04

    Contrast Setting

    50

    RGB Settings

    Gain (0,0,0), Offset (0,0,0)

    Gamma Setting

    2.2

    Brightness Setting

    32

    Measured Brightness

    183 cd/m²

    Brightness Locked

    No

    The accuracy is great before calibration. Setting the Color Space setting to 'Auto' instead of its default of 'Native' locks the colors to the sRGB color space, and you can still change other settings as you wish. The colors are accurate, and even though the color temperature is slightly on the cooler side, it's still close to the 6500K target, but the white balance is off. Also, the gamma curve doesn't follow the target curve well, as most scenes as brighter than intended.

    LEARN ABOUT COLOR ACCURACY (PRE-CALIBRATION)

    8.5

    Picture Quality

    Color Accuracy (Post-Calibration)

    Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    sRGB Gamut Area xy

    108.9%

    White Balance dE (Avg.)

    0.72

    Color Temperature (Avg.)

    6,470 K

    Gamma (Avg.)

    2.20

    Color dE (Avg.)

    1.42

    Contrast Setting

    50

    RGB Settings

    Gain (6,-7,1), Offset (2,2,1)

    Gamma Setting

    2.2

    Brightness Setting

    3

    Measured Brightness

    101 cd/m²

    ICC Profile

    Download

    The accuracy after calibration is excellent. While the white balance, color temperature, and gamma curve have improved, the gamut area is worse as some colors are slightly oversaturated.

    LEARN ABOUT COLOR ACCURACY (POST-CALIBRATION)

    9.7

    Picture Quality

    SDR Color Gamut

    sRGB Coverage xy

    99.3%

    sRGB Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    Adobe RGB Coverage xy

    94.1%

    Adobe RGB Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    The Samsung OLED G8 has a superb SDR color gamut. It has full coverage of the sRGB color space and covers the Adobe RGB color space remarkably well. However, there are some inaccuracies with reds and greens in that color space, which is an issue if you edit photos in Adobe RGB.

    LEARN ABOUT SDR COLOR GAMUT

    9.6

    Picture Quality

    HDR Color Gamut

    Wide Color Gamut

    Yes

    DCI-P3 Coverage xy

    99.6%

    DCI-P3 Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    Rec. 2020 Coverage xy

    79.9%

    Rec. 2020 Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    The HDR color gamut is fantastic. Its coverage of the DCI-P3 color space used in most HDR content is close to perfect. It also has alright coverage of the wider Rec. 2020 color space, but some colors, like white, are inaccurate.

    LEARN ABOUT HDR COLOR GAMUT

    8.9

    Picture Quality

    HDR Color Volume

    1,000 cd/m² DCI-P3 Coverage ICtCp

    97.1%

    DCI-P3 Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    10,000 cd/m² Rec. 2020 Coverage ICtCp

    47.2%

    Rec. 2020 Picture Mode

    Game (Custom)

    The HDR color volume is amazing. One of the advantages of using a QD-OLED panel is that it displays a wider range of colors at higher luminance levels than traditional WOLEDs like the LG 27GS95QE-B. This means that it displays colors as bright as pure white.

    LEARN ABOUT HDR COLOR VOLUME

    7.0

    Picture Quality

    Text Clarity

    Pixel Type

    QD-OLED

    Subpixel Layout

    Triangular RGB

    The Samsung OLED G8 has decent text clarity, but it displays the same issues as other QD-OLED monitors, like the Dell Alienware AW3423DW and Dell Alienware AW3423DWF, due to its triangular RGB subpixel structure. This results in color fringing around some text and at the top and bottom of windows. If you have multiple windows open, you can see a thin green line at the top of every window and a thin red line at the bottom. You can see an example of the color fringing around text from the AW3423DW here. You can see more examples of pixel photos from the AW3423DW here, as it uses the same panel.

    While the text clarity isn't as good as other 34-inch, 3440x1440 displays with a typical RGB subpixel structure, text is still easy to read, and it's a personal preference whether this bothers you or not. Although enabling Windows ClearType (top photo) doesn't improve the text clarity, there are also workarounds to this, like using the free utility Better ClearType Tuner, which improves text clarity significantly. This is what it looks like with Better ClearType Tuner with the Contrast at '1000', as you can see here, and with it off here. The photos above are in Windows 10, and you can also see them in Windows 11 with ClearType on and ClearType off.

    If you want to learn more about the text clarity, you can read our writer's and tester's subjective opinions here from the Dell Alienware AW3423DW review.

    LEARN ABOUT TEXT CLARITY

    9.4

    Picture Quality

    Reflections

    Screen Finish

    Glossy

    Total Reflections

    1.4%

    Indirect Reflections

    0.9%

    Calculated Direct Reflections

    0.5%

    The Samsung G8 handles reflection superbly well. Unlike other glossy screens, there aren't any distracting reflections from strong light sources. However, QD-OLED panels lack a polarizing layer, causing blacks to have a purple tint in bright rooms. This means you don't benefit from the OLED panel's near-infinite contrast ratio if there's a light directly on the screen, and this is a common issue with QD-OLEDs. You can see examples of what this looks like in a bright room with the Dell Alienware AW3423DW review here.

    LEARN ABOUT REFLECTIONS

    9.7

    Picture Quality

    Gradient

    Color Depth

    10 Bit

    The Samsung G8 OLED has superb gradient handling, and you won't notice any banding.

    LEARN ABOUT GRADIENT

    Motion

    7.6

    Motion

    Refresh Rate

    Native Refresh Rate

    175 Hz

    Max Refresh Rate

    175 Hz

    Max Refresh Rate Over DP

    175 Hz

    Max Refresh Rate Over HDMI

    175 Hz

    Max Refresh Rate Over DP @ 10-bit

    175 Hz

    Max Refresh Rate Over HDMI @ 10-Bit

    175 Hz

    We experienced issues using an HDMI to Micro HDMI adapter with 10-bit signals as the signal drops at times before coming back. You can fix this by dropping the signal to 8-bit. If you prefer an ultrawide OLED monitor with an even higher 240Hz refresh rate, consider the LG 45GR95QE-B.

    LEARN ABOUT REFRESH RATE

    Motion

    Variable Refresh Rate (VRR)

    Variable Refresh Rate

    Yes

    FreeSync

    Yes

    G-SYNC

    Compatible (Tested)

    VRR Maximum

    175 Hz

    VRR Minimum

    < 20 Hz

    VRR Supported Connectors

    DisplayPort, HDMI

    NVIDIAVRR MinVRR Max
    DisplayPort<20Hz175Hz
    HDMI<20Hz175Hz

    AMDVRR MinVRR Max
    DisplayPort<20Hz175Hz
    HDMI<20Hz175Hz

    On top of supporting FreeSync VRR and G-SYNC compatibility, this monitor also supports HDMI Forum VRR.

    LEARN ABOUT VARIABLE REFRESH RATE (VRR)

    9.9

    Motion

    VRR Motion Performance

    Recommended VRR OD Setting

    No OD Mode

    Variable Overdrive Advertised

    No

    Avg. CAD

    8

    Best CAD

    8

    Worst CAD

    8

    Refresh RateCAD HeatmapRT ChartPursuit Photo
    174HeatmapChartPhoto
    165HeatmapChartPhoto
    144HeatmapChartPhoto
    120HeatmapChartPhoto
    100HeatmapChartPhoto
    80HeatmapChartPhoto
    60HeatmapChartPhoto

    The Samsung Odyssey G85SB has outstanding motion handling across its entire refresh rate range with VRR enabled. CAD remains low throughout, and there's minimal blur with fast-moving objects.

    9.6

    Motion

    Refresh Rate Compliance

    Compliance @ Max Hz

    94%

    Compliance @ 120 FPS

    95%

    Compliance @ 60 FPS

    95%

    The refresh rate compliance is outstanding. Its near-instantaneous response time is fast enough to make full-color transitions before drawing the next frame.

    9.9

    Motion

    CAD @ Max Refresh Rate

    OD Transition Max Refresh Rate

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    Avg. CAD

    8

    Best 10% CAD

    4

    Worst 10% CAD

    15

    Overdrive ModeCAD HeatmapRT ChartPursuit Photo
    No OverdriveHeatmapChartPhoto

    The CAD at the maximum refresh rate is outstanding. It displays fast-moving objects as intended, and motion is extremely sharp.

    Motion

    Response Time @ Max Refresh Rate

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    First Response Time

    0.2 ms

    Total Response Time

    0.2 ms

    RGB Overshoot

    0 RGB

    Worst 10% First Response Time

    1.2 ms

    Worst 10% Total Response Time

    1.2 ms

    Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

    0 RGB

    Overdrive ModeFirst Response HeatmapTotal Response HeatmapRGB Overshoot Heatmap
    No OverdriveHeatmapHeatmapHeatmap

    9.9

    Motion

    CAD @ 120Hz

    OD Transition 120Hz

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    Avg. CAD

    9

    Best 10% CAD

    4

    Worst 10% CAD

    16

    Overdrive ModeCAD HeatmapRT ChartPursuit Photo
    No OverdriveHeatmapChartPhoto

    The CAD at 120Hz is outstanding. Pixels transition to their target RGB level almost instantly, so there isn't any blur trail or noticeable inverse ghosting.

    Motion

    Response Time @ 120Hz

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    First Response Time

    0.3 ms

    Total Response Time

    0.3 ms

    RGB Overshoot

    0 RGB

    Worst 10% First Response Time

    1.3 ms

    Worst 10% Total Response Time

    1.3 ms

    Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

    0 RGB

    Overdrive ModeFirst Response HeatmapTotal Response HeatmapRGB Overshoot Heatmap
    No OverdriveHeatmapHeatmapHeatmap

    9.9

    Motion

    CAD @ 60Hz

    OD Transition 60Hz

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    Avg. CAD

    14

    Best 10% CAD

    6

    Worst 10% CAD

    23

    Overdrive ModeCAD HeatmapRT ChartPursuit Photo
    No OverdriveHeatmapChartPhoto

    The CAD at 60Hz is outstanding. Pixels transition colors almost perfectly, and any noticeable blur is persistence.

    Motion

    Response Time @ 60Hz

    Recommended Overdrive Setting

    No OD Mode

    First Response Time

    0.5 ms

    Total Response Time

    0.5 ms

    RGB Overshoot

    0 RGB

    Worst 10% First Response Time

    2.5 ms

    Worst 10% Total Response Time

    2.5 ms

    Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

    N/A

    Overdrive ModeFirst Response HeatmapTotal Response HeatmapRGB Overshoo tHeatmap
    No OverdriveHeatmapHeatmapHeatmap

    Motion

    Backlight Strobing (BFI)

    Backlight Strobing (BFI)

    Yes

    Maximum Frequency

    60 Hz

    Minimum Frequency

    60 Hz

    Longest Pulse Width Brightness

    137 cd/m²

    Shortest Pulse Width Brightness

    137 cd/m²

    Pulse Width Control

    No

    Pulse Phase Control

    No

    Pulse Amplitude Control

    Yes

    VRR At The Same Time

    No

    The Samsung G85SB has an optional backlight strobing feature to reduce persistence blur. However, it's very limited, as you need to have the input label from the monitor's OSD set to 'Game Console' with a 4k @ 60Hz signal, with VRR and Game Mode disabled, which also causes the input lag to increase. Using it with these settings also causes the image to stretch out if you keep the default aspect ratio 21:9, as you can see here. To get a proper image, you need to change the aspect ratio in the OSD menu to 16:9, but you'll get black bars on the sides.

    LEARN ABOUT BACKLIGHT STROBING (BFI)

    5.9

    Motion

    VRR Flicker

    Dark Gray Flicker

    4.4 RGB

    Middle Gray Flicker

    1.0 RGB

    Light Gray Flicker

    0.8 RGB

    This monitor has noticeable VRR flicker with changing frame rates, and it's especially visible in dark scenes and dark shadows of bright scenes. This can be distracting while gaming, but it's common with most OLEDs, and it isn't as much of an issue with consistent frame rates.

    The monitor has a VRR Control setting that reduces VRR flicker, as you can see the results with it on below, but it introduces stutter and increases the input lag. The results in the review are with VRR Control disabled.

    Flicker LevelsVRR Control On
    Dark Gray Flicker1.0 RGB
    Middle Gray Flicker0.1 RGB
    Light Gray Flicker0.9 RGB
    Flicker VideoVideo

    10

    Motion

    Image Flicker

    Flicker-Free

    No

    PWM Dimming Frequency

    0 Hz

    The backlight isn't technically flicker-free because it has a slight dip in brightness that corresponds to the 175Hz refresh rate. However, it isn't considered pulse-width modulation like on LED-backlit monitors because it isn't a full-screen on-and-off flicker, and you won't notice it.

    LEARN ABOUT IMAGE FLICKER

    Inputs

    8.4

    Inputs

    Input Lag

    Native Resolution @ Max Hz

    3.5 ms

    Native Resolution @ 120Hz

    5.0 ms

    Native Resolution @ 60Hz

    9.6 ms

    Backlight Strobing (BFI)

    55.0 ms

    The Samsung G8 OLED has low input lag. This means you'll have a responsive gaming experience and won't notice any delay. The results are with the following settings:

    • Input Label: PC
    • Game Mode: On
    • Picture Mode: Custom
    • VRR: Off
    • VRR Control: Off
    • Firmware: 1442

    The input lag is much higher with the original firmware, 1421, so try updating the firmware if you feel any delay. Enabling VRR Control also increases the input lag, as it goes up to 17.6 ms at the max refresh rate.

    LEARN ABOUT INPUT LAG

    7.7

    Inputs

    Resolution

    Native Resolution

    3440 x 1440

    Aspect Ratio

    21:9

    Megapixels

    5.0 MP

    Pixel Density

    110 PPI

    LEARN ABOUT RESOLUTION

    7.1

    Inputs

    PS5 Compatibility

    4k @ 120Hz

    No

    4k @ 60Hz

    Yes

    1440p @ 120Hz

    Yes

    1440p @ 60Hz

    Yes

    1080p @ 120Hz

    Yes

    1080p @ 60Hz

    Yes

    The monitor works well with the PS5, but there are some quirks. You need to turn off Game Mode for 4k @ 60Hz to work, which increases the input lag, and despite the HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, it doesn't support 4k @ 120Hz at all. As the monitor has a Micro HDMI port, you need an adapter or an HDMI to Micro HDMI cable to connect the PS5. Lastly, the console doesn't support ultrawide gaming, so you'll see black bars on the sides. Although the monitor doesn't have an audio output to connect external speakers with the console, it at least has built-in speakers.

    6.6

    Inputs

    Xbox Series X|S Compatibility

    4k @ 120Hz

    No

    4k @ 60Hz

    Yes

    1440p @ 120Hz

    Yes

    1440p @ 60Hz

    Yes

    1080p @ 120Hz

    Yes

    1080p @ 60Hz

    Yes

    There are some limitations to the compatibility with the Xbox Series X|S on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8 G85SB. You need to disable VRR for 4k @ 60Hz to work, and because the Xbox only supports HDR in 4k, you can't get HDR and VRR at the same time with any signal, as you can see here. Despite the HDMI 2.1 bandwidth, it doesn't support 4k @ 120Hz at all, and because of the Micro HDMI port, you need an adapter or an HDMI to Micro HDMI cable to connect the Xbox to it. Lastly, the console doesn't support ultrawide gaming, so you'll see black bars on the sides. Although the monitor doesn't have an audio output to connect external speakers with the console, it at least has built-in speakers.

    Inputs

    Inputs Photos

    Inputs

    Video And Audio Ports

    DisplayPort

    No

    Mini DisplayPort

    1 (DP 1.4)

    HDMI

    1 (Micro-HDMI)

    HDMI 2.1 Rated Speed

    40Gbps (FRL 10x4)

    DVI

    No

    VGA

    No

    Daisy Chaining

    No

    3.5mm Audio Out

    No

    3.5mm Audio In

    No

    HDR10

    Yes

    3.5mm Microphone In

    No

    Inputs

    USB

    USB-A Ports

    0

    USB-A Rated Speed

    No USB-A Ports

    USB-B Upstream Port

    No

    USB-C Ports

    2

    USB-C Upstream

    Yes

    USB-C Rated Speed

    5Gbps (USB 3.2 Gen 1)

    USB-C Power Delivery

    65W

    USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode

    Yes

    Thunderbolt

    No

    One of the USB-C ports supports DisplayPort Alt Mode with 65W of power delivery, which is the port you have to use if you want to connect a laptop and display an image via USB-C. The other USB-C port is limited to 10W of power as it's meant to connect your small devices, like a keyboard or mouse. You need to set USB Source Setup to 'USB-C' for the passthrough to work between the two USB-C ports.

    Inputs

    macOS Compatibility

    The Samsung G8 works well with macOS. VRR works within the range of 48Hz-120Hz. HDR gaming looks good, but colors look better in SDR for general desktop usage, as the aggressive ABL causes large areas to be dim in HDR. If you're using a MacBook, windows return to their normal position after waking the laptop from sleep or when opening the lid. You can also use an external mouse and keyboard while your laptop is closed.

    LEARN ABOUT MACOS COMPATIBILITY

    Features

    Features

    Additional Features

    Speakers

    Yes

    RGB Illumination

    Controllable

    Multiple Input Display

    No

    KVM Switch

    No

    The Samsung OLED G85SB comes with Samsung's proprietary Tizen smart platform built-in, offering many features similar to a Samsung smart TV. You can access applications like Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, or Disney+ without a computer. You can read more about all its features in the Smart Features section of the Samsung QN90B QLED TV review.

    The monitor has other gamer-oriented features, including:

    • Core Lighting: Controls the RGB lighting at the back of the monitor.
    • Game HDR: Helps increase the perceived brightness of the image in HDR.
    • Game Mode: Gives the lowest input lag possible.
    • HDR10+ Gaming (HDR Tone Mapping): Adjusts the colors in HDR to match the creator's intent.
    • Virtual Aim Point: Inserts a virtual crosshair that your PC won't detect.
    • Panel Care: Features to reduce the risk of burn-in associated with OLEDs:
      • Pixel Refresh: Allows you to run a complete pixel refresh cycle, which takes about an hour. You have to run it manually, but the system displays reminders.
      • Pixel Shift: This feature moves the entire image a few pixels to one side and gradually shifts it in a different direction over time. This helps reduce the effects of burn-in from very small elements, like fine lines in a game HUD.
      • Adjust Logo Brightness: Automatically dims the area around a logo when it detects one on the screen.

    In North America, Samsung has a one-year warranty, but it doesn't cover burn-in. However, the length of the warranty and its specifications can change between different regions and countries.

    Features

    On-Screen Display (OSD)

    Samsung Odyssey OLED G8/G85SB S34BG85 Review (2025)
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