![]() |
| The ROG Swift OLED PG32UCDM3 surpasses the PG32UCDM and PG32UCDMR in a few areas. |
If you've been holding your breath for the next evolution in elite gaming displays, exhale. ASUS has finally pulled back the curtain on the complete specs, price, and release window for its highly anticipated ROG Swift OLED PG32UCDM3, and it looks poised to be a new champion for the enthusiast crowd.
Following its initial tease in December and a showcase at CES 2026, the full picture of this third-generation OLED is now clear. It’s not just a minor refresh; ASUS is bringing meaningful upgrades to an already legendary lineup, all while aiming to deliver stunning performance without a staggering price hike.
The Heart of the Matter: A New QD-OLED Panel with "BlackShield"
The headline upgrade sits squarely with the panel itself. The PG32UCDM3 moves to a newer QD-OLED (Quantum Dot Organic Light-Emitting Diode) substrate. This technology is renowned for its perfect blacks, incredibly fast pixel response, and vibrant, wide color gamuts.
ASUS has added its own secret sauce: a semi-glossy film coating it calls 'BlackShield'. This aims to strike the perfect balance, reducing the diffuse reflections common with full matte finishes while avoiding the mirror-like distractions of a fully glossy screen. The result should be deeper perceived blacks and more intense colors in anything less than direct, harsh lighting.
The core specs remain top-tier: a crisp 4K UHD (3840 x 2160) resolution paired with a buttery-smooth 240Hz refresh rate. For HDR enthusiasts, the monitor promises a peak brightness of 1,000 nits and carries the VESA TrueBlack 500 certification, guaranteeing exceptional contrast in high dynamic range content. Creators and gamers alike will appreciate the wide 99% DCI-P3 color space coverage.
Connectivity Built for the Future (and Your Desk)
ASUS has equipped the PG32UCDM3 with a ports selection that leaves little to be desired. It’s ready for next-gen consoles and GPUs with two HDMI 2.1 ports. For PC users seeking the maximum bandwidth, a DisplayPort 2.1 (80 Gbps UHBR20) connection is onboard, capable of handling 4K @ 240Hz with room to spare.
The inclusion of a USB Type-C port with 90W Power Delivery is a major win for laptop gamers and those seeking a cleaner desk setup. It can handle video, data, and charge a compatible device all through one cable. For peripherals, you get three USB 3.0 Type-A downstream ports and a single USB Type-B upstream connection.
One note for audio purists: the SPIF audio output found on the very first PG32UCDM model is absent here, aligning the spec with the later PG32UCDMR revision.


