Dell Alienware AW3423DW Review (2024)

Design

Design

Style

Curved

Yes

Curve Radius

1800R

The Dell AW3423DW has a very gamer-oriented design with a white and black body, and the slight curve helps bring the edges of the screen more within your field of view. It also has zone lighting on the back with lights around the stand attachment and on the Alienware logo.

8.5

Design

Build Quality

The build quality is excellent. It's well-built, and the plastic body feels solid. The stand is heavy and keeps the screen stable, even when you adjust it. Although there's a bit of flex along the top bezel and near the inputs in the back, neither is of major concern. However, the main downside is that the cooling fan is loud enough that you can hear it in a quiet environment, but if you have music playing or your headphones are on while gaming, you won't hear it. If it bothers you, you sadly can't turn the fan off.

7.3

Design

Ergonomics

Min Height To Top Of Panel

15.9" (40.5 cm)

Height Adjustment

4.3" (11.0 cm)

Tilt Range

-21° to 5°

Rotate Portrait/Landscape

No

Swivel Range

-20° to 20°

Wall Mount

VESA 100x100

The Dell AW3423DW QD-OLED has decent ergonomics. It offers all the ergonomic adjustments you would expect from an ultrawide monitor, so it's easy to adjust. There's also a quick release button if you want to remove the display and mount it, and it comes with a bracket to make it easy to attach a wall-mount. Luckily, you can route your cables through the stand for cable management.

Design

Stand

Base Width

16.9" (43.0 cm)

Base Depth

12.2" (30.9 cm)

Thickness (With Display)

11.2" (28.5 cm)

Weight (With Display)

21.8 lbs (9.9 kg)

The stand supports the Dell Alienware AW3423DW well, and there's minimal wobble. However, the stand is big, so you'll need a deep table to place it on.

Design

Display

Size

34"

Housing Width

32.1" (81.5 cm)

Housing Height

14.3" (36.2 cm)

Thickness (Without Stand)

5.3" (13.4 cm)

Weight (Without Stand)

15.4 lbs (7.0 kg)

Borders Size (Bezels)

0.4" (0.9 cm)

Design

Controls

There's a joystick underneath the center of the screen to control the on-screen menu. Unlike past Alienware monitors, there aren't any physical shortcut buttons; instead, a virtual shortcut menu pops up when you press the center of the joystick, and you can assign those shortcuts to your preference. There's also a power button on the right side.

Design

In The Box

Power Supply

Internal

  • DisplayPort cable
  • Mini DisplayPort to DisplayPort cable
  • HDMI cable
  • USB-B to USB-A cable
  • Power cable
  • VESA adapter
  • VESA screws
  • Cardboard card holder:
    • Safety info
    • Alienware card
  • Calibration report
  • User guides

Picture Quality

10

Picture Quality

Contrast

Native Contrast

Inf : 1

Contrast With Local Dimming

Inf : 1

The Dell AW3423DW has a near-infinite contrast ratio thanks to its OLED panel. This means that blacks are deep and inky in a dark room. However, in a bright room, the contrast doesn't appear as good because the panel lacks a polarizing layer, raising the black levels and causing a purple tint, which you can read more about in Reflections.

LEARN ABOUT CONTRAST

10

Picture Quality

Local Dimming

Local Dimming

No

Backlight

No Backlight

This monitor 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

6.7

Picture Quality

SDR Brightness

Real Scene

236 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

248 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

245 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

245 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

246 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

246 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

247 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

242 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

242 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

244 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

243 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.001

Minimum Brightness

22 cd/m²

The Dell AW3423DW has alright SDR peak brightness. It doesn't get bright enough to fight a ton of glare from bright sources, but it isn't an issue if you have some lights around, either. Luckily, it maintains the brightness consistent across different content. These results are from after calibration in the 'Custom Color' Preset Mode with the Brightness at its max.

LEARN ABOUT SDR BRIGHTNESS

7.1

Picture Quality

HDR Brightness

VESA DisplayHDR Certification

DisplayHDR TRUE BLACK 400

Real Scene

484 cd/m²

Peak 2% Window

1,047 cd/m²

Peak 10% Window

474 cd/m²

Peak 25% Window

371 cd/m²

Peak 50% Window

312 cd/m²

Peak 100% Window

261 cd/m²

Sustained 2% Window

1,040 cd/m²

Sustained 10% Window

468 cd/m²

Sustained 25% Window

369 cd/m²

Sustained 50% Window

308 cd/m²

Sustained 100% Window

259 cd/m²

Automatic Brightness Limiting (ABL)

0.079

The HDR brightness is decent. It gets bright enough to make really small highlights pop, even in real content, but the brightness doesn't remain consistent with larger-sized highlights due to the Automatic Brightness Limiter (ABL). The brightness visibly changes when minimizing and maximizing windows on the desktop, and it's so obvious that it looks like the screen is adjusting its brightness setting. However, this issue is only distracting in the desktop, and it's not a problem with videos or games.

It also displays most highlights at their correct brightness until the sharp roll-off at the peak brightness, so it lets highlights get the brightest they could. This test is done with an 18% window size, but the EOTF changes depending on the window size, as it's a slower roll-off with smaller highlights, which you can see below:

  • 2% EOTF
  • 5% EOTF
  • 10% EOTF
  • 100% EOTF

The results are from the 'HDR Peak 1000' HDR Mode, but if the strong ABL bothers you, the 'HDR 400 True Black' mode has less variation in brightness, but small highlights aren't as bright:

  • Peak 2% Window 471 cd/m²
  • Peak 10% Window 467 cd/m²
  • Peak 25% Window 404 cd/m²
  • Peak 50% Window 345 cd/m²
  • Peak 100% Window 292 cd/m²
  • Sustained 2% Window 466 cd/m²
  • Sustained 10% Window 463 cd/m²
  • Sustained 25% Window 401 cd/m²
  • Sustained 50% Window 340 cd/m²
  • Sustained 100% Window 289 cd/m²
  • EOTF

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 Dell Alienware AW3423DW has a remarkable horizontal viewing angle. Although it's technically not perfect, you won't notice any inaccuracies when viewing from the sides.

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 Dell AW3423DW has an outstanding vertical viewing angle. The image looks the same if you're standing up and looking down at the screen.

LEARN ABOUT VERTICAL VIEWING ANGLE

8.5

Picture Quality

Gray Uniformity

50% Std. Dev.

1.794%

50% DSE

0.132%

The gray uniformity is excellent. There's hardly any dirty screen effect in the center, and large areas of uniform colors in games or full-screen webpages look great. Like any OLED, it has thin vertical lines in near-dark scenes, as well as some Venetian Blind Effect with darker grays, but both issues aren't that noticeable with most content. You can also see the uniformity with darker shades of gray below:

  • 5% gray
  • 10% gray
  • 15% gray
  • 20% gray
  • 25% gray
  • 30% gray

LEARN ABOUT GRAY UNIFORMITY

10

Picture Quality

Black Uniformity

Native Std. Dev.

0.111%

Std. Dev. w/ L.D.

N/A

As the Dell AW3423DW has an OLED panel, there's no blooming around bright objects, and it has perfect black uniformity.

LEARN ABOUT BLACK UNIFORMITY

9.3

Picture Quality

Color Accuracy (Pre-Calibration)

Picture Mode

Creator (sRGB)

sRGB Gamut Area xy

102.7%

White Balance dE (Avg.)

1.21

Color Temperature (Avg.)

6,636 K

Gamma (Avg.)

2.25

Color dE (Avg.)

0.90

Contrast Setting

75

RGB Settings

Default

Gamma Setting

2.2

Brightness Setting

15

Measured Brightness

48 cd/m²

Brightness Locked

No

This monitor has remarkable accuracy before calibration. The 'sRGB' Preset Mode results in extremely accurate colors and white balance, and the color temperature is close to the 6500K target. However, gamma doesn't follow the target curve very well, as most scenes are too dark. The 'sRGB' mode only locks you out of the RGB controls, and other modes are less accurate.

LEARN ABOUT COLOR ACCURACY (PRE-CALIBRATION)

9.6

Picture Quality

Color Accuracy (Post-Calibration)

Picture Mode

Custom Color

sRGB Gamut Area xy

101.1%

White Balance dE (Avg.)

0.62

Color Temperature (Avg.)

6,463 K

Gamma (Avg.)

2.18

Color dE (Avg.)

0.67

Contrast Setting

75

RGB Settings

100-99-100

Gamma Setting

No Gamma Setting

Brightness Setting

38

Measured Brightness

100 cd/m²

ICC Profile

Download

The Dell AW3423DW has incredible accuracy after calibration, though calibrating it doesn't do much. The white balance and color temperature are both improved, and while gamma is better, it's still not perfect.

LEARN ABOUT COLOR ACCURACY (POST-CALIBRATION)

9.7

Picture Quality

SDR Color Gamut

sRGB Coverage xy

100.0%

sRGB Picture Mode

Custom Color

Adobe RGB Coverage xy

92.2%

Adobe RGB Picture Mode

Custom Color

The Dell AW3423DW has a fantastic SDR color gamut. It has perfect coverage of the sRGB color space, and while it has excellent coverage of the Adobe RGB color space, reds and greens are inaccurate in this color space. This isn't ideal if you're a photo editor and need to use those colors.

LEARN ABOUT SDR COLOR GAMUT

9.6

Picture Quality

HDR Color Gamut

Wide Color Gamut

Yes

DCI-P3 Coverage xy

99.4%

DCI-P3 Picture Mode

HDR Peak 1000

Rec. 2020 Coverage xy

78.9%

Rec. 2020 Picture Mode

HDR Peak 1000

The HDR color gamut is remarkable. It has near-perfect coverage of the commonly used DCI-P3 color space with good tone mapping, and it has alright coverage of the wider Rec. 2020 color space too, although colors are less accurate.

LEARN ABOUT HDR COLOR GAMUT

8.9

Picture Quality

HDR Color Volume

1,000 cd/m² DCI-P3 Coverage ICtCp

96.3%

DCI-P3 Picture Mode

HDR Peak 1000

10,000 cd/m² Rec. 2020 Coverage ICtCp

47.1%

Rec. 2020 Picture Mode

HDR Peak 1000

The HDR color volume is outstanding. It displays colors at a wide range of luminance levels, making them look vivid and pop, which is the main advantage of a QD-OLED.

LEARN ABOUT HDR COLOR VOLUME

7.0

Picture Quality

Text Clarity

Pixel Type

QD-OLED

Subpixel Layout

Triangular RGB

Overall, the Dell AW3423DW has decent text clarity. It uses a unique triangular RGB subpixel structure different from most displays with the three subpixels in a line. Programs don't render text well with the subpixel layout, so text clarity isn't as good as on other ultrawide displays. Windows ClearType (top photo) doesn't improve the text clarity much. You can see two other examples with the camera zoomed out with ClearType on and ClearType off. While this subpixel structure isn't ideal, it's not a serious issue, either, and you can read about our own subjective impressions using the monitor here.

The free utility Better ClearType Tuner improves text clarity significantly, and the subpixel structure isn't noticeable with Font Antialiasing set to 'RGB' and Contrast set between 1800-2200, as shown here.

However, due to the subpixel structure, there's slight color fringing on the edge 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. Below you can see pixel photos from different configurations:

  • White on black background - green color fringing on top
  • White on black background - red color fringing on bottom
  • White on black background - no color fringing on side
  • White on black background - no color fringing on side
  • Blue pixels
  • Green pixels
  • Red pixels
  • Blue and red pixels
  • Green and red pixels
  • Green and blue pixels
  • Green and blue pixels - fringing on bottom
  • Green and blue pixels - fringing on top
  • Blue and red pixels - no fringing
  • Blue and red pixels - no fringing
  • Green and red pixels - fringing on top
  • Green and red pixels - fringing on bottom

The color fringing is also visible with larger text elements, like on the Google home page logo, as you can see here.

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%

In theory, the Dell AW3423DW QD-OLED has incredible reflection handling. It handles dim light sources well, and unlike other glossy screens, there aren't any distracting reflections from strong light sources, but the reflections look distorted. Unfortunately, having direct light on the screen affects the monitor's performance as the OLED panel doesn't have a polarizing layer, resulting in blacks having a purple tint in a bright room. It also raises the black levels, effectively removing the near-infinite contrast OLEDs have as, so you need to use it in a dark room for the best performance. If that bothers you, it's better to go for a WOLED, like the LG 34GS95QE-B, which displays deep blacks even in bright rooms.

You can see alternative photos of the reflections below:

  • Average Room - Screen On
  • Average Room - Screen Off
  • Bright Room - Screen On
  • Bright Room - Screen Off

You can also see what it looks like next to the LG 48 C1 OLED (left) and the ViewSonic XG2431 (right) in a bright room here and you can tell that the Dell has a purple tint even when it's off. Below are photos of the AW3423DW (left) and the XG2431 (right) displaying black images in bright and dark rooms:

  • Bright Room
  • Bright Room - Angle
  • Dark Room

LEARN ABOUT REFLECTIONS

9.8

Picture Quality

Gradient

Color Depth

10 Bit

The Dell AW3423DW has incredible gradient handling, and you won't see 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

100 Hz

Max Refresh Rate Over DP @ 10-bit

144 Hz

Max Refresh Rate Over HDMI @ 10-Bit

60 Hz

Due to bandwidth limitations, you can only achieve the max refresh rate with a DisplayPort connection and an 8-bit signal. If you want a monitor with an even higher refresh rate, check out the Dell Alienware AW2725DF instead.

LEARN ABOUT REFRESH RATE

Motion

Variable Refresh Rate (VRR)

Variable Refresh Rate

Yes

FreeSync

Compatible (Tested)

G-SYNC

Yes (Native)

VRR Maximum

175 Hz

VRR Minimum

< 20 Hz

VRR Supported Connectors

DisplayPort, HDMI

NVIDIAVRR MinVRR Max
DisplayPort<20Hz175Hz
HDMI<20Hz100Hz

AMDVRR MinVRR Max
DisplayPort<20Hz175Hz
HDMI<20Hz100Hz

Due to the monitor's native G-SYNC support, it also supports HDMI Forum VRR.

LEARN ABOUT VARIABLE REFRESH RATE (VRR)

9.8

Motion

VRR Motion Performance

Recommended VRR OD Setting

No OD Mode

Variable Overdrive Advertised

No

Avg. CAD

15

Best CAD

14

Worst CAD

16

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

The Dell AW3434DW 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.

9.8

Motion

Refresh Rate Compliance

Compliance @ Max Hz

95%

Compliance @ 120 FPS

96%

Compliance @ 60 FPS

97%

The refresh rate compliance is outstanding. Since it has a near-instantaneous response time, it makes 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

14

Best 10% CAD

6

Worst 10% CAD

23

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

0.3 ms

Total Response Time

0.9 ms

RGB Overshoot

1 RGB

Worst 10% First Response Time

0.4 ms

Worst 10% Total Response Time

5.6 ms

Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

5 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

15

Best 10% CAD

7

Worst 10% CAD

28

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. There's some minor overshoot in transitions going from dark to bright colors, but it isn't noticeable.

Motion

Response Time @ 120Hz

Recommended Overdrive Setting

No OD Mode

First Response Time

0.3 ms

Total Response Time

1.0 ms

RGB Overshoot

0 RGB

Worst 10% First Response Time

0.4 ms

Worst 10% Total Response Time

8.2 ms

Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

5 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

17

Best 10% CAD

7

Worst 10% CAD

51

Overdrive ModeCAD HeatmapRT ChartPursuit Photo
No OverdriveHeatmapChartPhoto

The CAD at 60Hz is outstanding. Pixels transition colors almost perfectly, and any noticeable blur is persistent. At 120Hz, there's some minor overshoot in some transitions, but it's hard to notice.

Motion

Response Time @ 60Hz

Recommended Overdrive Setting

No OD Mode

First Response Time

0.3 ms

Total Response Time

2.1 ms

RGB Overshoot

1 RGB

Worst 10% First Response Time

0.4 ms

Worst 10% Total Response Time

16.8 ms

Worst 10% RGB Overshoot

5 RGB

Overdrive ModeFirst Response HeatmapTotal Response HeatmapRGB Overshoot Heatmap
No OverdriveHeatmapHeatmapHeatmap

Motion

Backlight Strobing (BFI)

Backlight Strobing (BFI)

No BFI

Maximum Frequency

N/A

Minimum Frequency

N/A

Longest Pulse Width Brightness

N/A

Shortest Pulse Width Brightness

N/A

Pulse Width Control

No BFI

Pulse Phase Control

No BFI

Pulse Amplitude Control

No BFI

VRR At The Same Time

No BFI

This monitor doesn't have a black frame insertion feature to reduce persistence blur.

LEARN ABOUT BACKLIGHT STROBING (BFI)

9.1

Motion

VRR Flicker

Dark Gray Flicker

0.9 RGB

Middle Gray Flicker

0.2 RGB

Light Gray Flicker

0.1 RGB

Luckily, this monitor doesn't have as much VRR flicker as other OLED displays, mainly when the frame rates consistently fluctuate, as seen in the video with the periodic frame time. However, there's a lot more flicker with randomly changing frame rates, as you can see in the video, and this is most noticeable in dark scenes. This is more in line with OLEDs, so you may see this flicker when the frame rate randomly changes. That said, the best way to avoid this VRR flicker is either by disabling VRR or using a frame cap to get more consistent frame rates.

10

Motion

Image Flicker

Flicker-Free

No

PWM Dimming Frequency

0 Hz

This monitor isn't technically flicker-free because there's a small dip in brightness that corresponds with the 175Hz refresh rate. The dip represents when the screen refreshes itself, but it isn't noticeable because it's just an oscillation in brightness, and it isn't a full-screen on-and-off pattern like the flicker on LED-backlit displays.

LEARN ABOUT IMAGE FLICKER

Inputs

8.7

Inputs

Input Lag

Native Resolution @ Max Hz

4.3 ms

Native Resolution @ 120Hz

6.5 ms

Native Resolution @ 60Hz

15.5 ms

Backlight Strobing (BFI)

N/A

This monitor has low input lag for a responsive feel. While it increases a bit at 60Hz, it isn't enough to be noticeable unless your games require the quickest reactions. Dell released a firmware update in Dec. 2023 to improve the input lag compared to what it was previously. However, you can only update the firmware with an NVIDIA graphics card, so if you can't do so, these are the input lag results before the update:

  • Native Resolution @ Max Hz 7.9 ms
  • Native Resolution @ 120Hz 10.9 ms
  • Native Resolution @ 60Hz 18.4 ms

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

5.0

Inputs

PS5 Compatibility

4k @ 120Hz

No

4k @ 60Hz

No

1440p @ 120Hz

Yes

1440p @ 60Hz

Yes

1080p @ 120Hz

Yes

1080p @ 60Hz

Yes

This monitor has limited compatibility with the PS5, as it doesn't even downscale 4k signals. The console also doesn't support ultrawide signals, so you'll see an image with black bars on the sides.

5.0

Inputs

Xbox Series X|S Compatibility

4k @ 120Hz

No

4k @ 60Hz

No

1440p @ 120Hz

Yes

1440p @ 60Hz

Yes

1080p @ 120Hz

Yes

1080p @ 60Hz

Yes

This monitor has limited compatibility with the Xbox Series X|S. Since the console only supports HDR in 4k, and the monitor doesn't support 4k downscaling, you can't get HDR on the monitor. Also, because the console doesn't support ultrawide gaming, you'll see black bars on the sides. If you need better compatibility with the Xbox Series X|S, check out the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8/G85SB S34BG85.

Inputs

Inputs Photos

The power input is on the back left side of the Dell Alienware AW3423DW, next to the service port.

Inputs

Video And Audio Ports

DisplayPort

1 (DP 1.4)

Mini DisplayPort

No

HDMI

2 (HDMI 2.0)

HDMI 2.1 Rated Speed

No HDMI 2.1

DVI

No

VGA

No

Daisy Chaining

No

3.5mm Audio Out

2

3.5mm Audio In

No

HDR10

Yes

3.5mm Microphone In

No

The Dell AW3423DW has two audio outputs. You can use the one on the left for your earphones, as the one on the back is designed for speakers with their own volume control. You can still plug headphones into the back port, but you can't change the volume unless they have their own volume control.

Inputs

USB

USB-A Ports

4

USB-A Rated Speed

5Gbps (USB 3.2 Gen 1)

USB-B Upstream Port

Yes

USB-C Ports

0

USB-C Upstream

No USB-C Ports

USB-C Rated Speed

No USB-C Ports

USB-C Power Delivery

No USB-C Ports

USB-C DisplayPort Alt Mode

No USB-C Ports

Thunderbolt

No

You need to connect the USB-B to USB-A cable to your PC if you want to use the USB-A ports to plug in your peripherals like your mouse and keyboard. It doesn't have any USB-C ports, but if you want something with USB-C, look into the MSI MEG 342C QD-OLED.

Inputs

macOS Compatibility

The Dell AW3423DW works well with macOS. VRR works on the desktop and in games. Unfortunately, due to the aggressive ABL, HDR doesn't look good during desktop usage as large areas are noticeably dimmer, so it's better to stick with SDR on the desktop. However, HDR looks amazing in games.

The same text clarity issues are present on Windows PCs due to the unique subpixel layout, and you can see two additional text clarity photos on macOS here and here.

The Alienware Command Center software isn't available on macOS, so you can't access certain features like the color profiles.

LEARN ABOUT MACOS COMPATIBILITY

Features

Features

Additional Features

Speakers

No

RGB Illumination

Controllable

Multiple Input Display

No

KVM Switch

No

The Dell AW3423DW has a few extra features, including:

  • Alienware Command Center: Application to control the RGB backlighting and other basic functions like power consumption and color profiles. This software is only available on Windows, but you can still change the backlighting colors through the OSD if you have a macOS device.
  • Ambient Light Sensor: Adjusts the screen's brightness according to your room's lighting.
  • Dark Stabilizer: Changes gamma in games so that you can see your opponents more easily in darker areas.
  • Display Alignment: Displays a virtual grid that makes it easier to line up your screen next to another display.
  • Eco Mode: Puts the monitor into standby mode when your PC is off.
  • FPS Counter: Shows the current FPS of your source.
  • OLED Panel Maintenance: Has features to reduce the risk of burn-in associated with OLEDs, which you can read about below. Dell also offers a three-year burn-in warranty.
    • Pixel Refresh: The monitor runs a pixel shift cycle after every four hours of usage, or if you disable it, after 20 hours of usage. It takes about seven minutes to complete. Before Dell released the firmware update in Dec. 2023, the monitor wouldn't go into standby mode after completing a pixel refresh cycle, but it does after the update.
    • Panel Refresh: This is a more complicated process that refreshes the whole panel and takes about an hour to do, but it only runs after 1,500 hours of usage.

Features

On-Screen Display (OSD)

Dell Alienware AW3423DW Review (2024)

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