The range will launch globally and sit above the existing UltraGear line. There will be three flagship models, the 39GX950B, 27GM950B and 52G930B, all built around what it calls high-resolution excellence. The company is leaning hard on an on-device AI solution, which it says enables the world’s first 5K AI Upscaling technology.
LG claims that upscaling delivers 5K-class clarity without forcing a GPU upgrade, so more content looks sharper than it does at its native resolution. It also folds in AI Scene Optimisation and AI Sound, which sounds like the sort of feature list that grows when marketing is left to its own devices.
The 39-inch UltraGear evo GX9 (39GX950B) is a 5K2K OLED monitor that LG says analyses and enhances content in real time before it hits the panel. LG is pairing that with its Primary RGB Tandem OLED tech, promising improved brightness, colour accuracy and panel longevity, along with perfect blacks and lifelike colours.
There is a Dual Mode switch for genre-hopping, with 165Hz at 5K2K for the pretty stuff and 330Hz at WFHD for the sweaty stuff. LG is quoting a 0.03ms (GtG) response time, because gaming monitor specs always arrive with a stopwatch.
The screen is a 1500R-curved 21:9 ultrawide that keeps the vertical height of a 32-inch display while widening the view for games and multitasking. LG says it hits 142 PPI and carries VESA DisplayHDR True Black 500 certification for punchy highlights and deep blacks.
The 27-inch UltraGear evo GM9 (27GM950B) is billed as the world’s first 5K New Mini-LED gaming monitor, designed to improve blooming control dramatically. LG is promising fewer halo effects via 2,304 local dimming zones and Zero Optical Distance engineering to tighten the gap between panel and LEDs.
Like the 39-inch model, it comes with the same on-device AI bundle, including 5K AI Upscaling, AI Scene Optimisation, and AI Sound. Dual Mode returns here too, with 165Hz at 5K or 330Hz at QHD, plus a 1ms (GtG) response time.
LG says it is VESA DisplayHDR 1000 certified and can hit up to 1,250 nits peak brightness. The company is clearly aiming this one at anyone who wants MiniLED punch without the usual glowing fog around bright objects.
Then there is the 52-inch UltraGear evo G9 (52G930B), which is being touted as the world’s largest 5K2K gaming monitor, paired with a 240Hz refresh rate to keep the big panel feeling snappy.
LG says the screen has the vertical viewing height of a standard 42-inch 16:9 display, stretched into a 12:9 panoramic view. It claims a workspace 33 per cent wider than a standard UHD monitor, with a 1000R curvature to wrap around your peripheral vision, plus VESA Display HDR 600.
LG Media Entertainment Solution Company, head of the Display Business, Lee Choong-hwoan, said: “The new UltraGear evo marks a definitive turning point, signalling the end of compromises in gaming display performance. With innovations like industry-first 5K AI Upscaling, the lineup ensures that whether gamers prefer perfect blacks, unmatched brightness, or expansive scale, they can enjoy the same high standard of performance, clarity and immersion in high resolution. This reflects our excellence in delivering high-resolution technology not only to the B2C gaming market but also through precision-driven B2B solutions like medical monitors.”
LG says it will show the lineup at CES 2026 across two zones, including the “Dream Setup” inspired by Reddit’s gaming communities and a SimCraft-powered racing sim built around the new 39-inch GX9. It is also kicking off global sales of the UltraGear GX7 (27GX790B) on the opening day of CES 2026, a 27-inch QHD Primary RGB Tandem OLED with a 540Hz refresh rate and Dual Mode (HD 720Hz).