AOC Unveils Agon Pro: New 34-Inch Tandem OLED Gaming Monitor Hits 1300-Nit Peak Brightness, Price Now Official

AOC has finally put a price tag on its new Agon Pro AGP346UCSD gaming monitor, a premium 34-inch ultrawide built around an advanced 5-layer tandem QD-OLED panel. With a steep set of flagship specs, this curved display is clearly aimed at competitive players and enthusiasts who want extremely high refresh rates, strong HDR peak brightness, and better everyday usability than earlier OLED monitor generations.

The Agon Pro AGP346UCSD uses a 21:9 curved 34-inch panel with a 3440 x 1440 resolution and a very fast 360 Hz refresh rate, making it a serious option for high-FPS PC gaming. One standout detail is AOC’s use of a V-Stripe subpixel layout, which is expected to deliver cleaner text and improved desktop readability compared with some QD-OLED panels that use triangular subpixel arrangements. That matters if you plan to do more than just game, like browsing, writing, editing, or working long hours on the display.

Brightness is another big talking point. AOC advertises up to 1,300 nits peak brightness in small highlight areas, which should help HDR effects pop in supported games and video. The company hasn’t shared a sustained full-screen brightness figure, but the high peak number suggests the monitor is designed to deliver intense highlights where it counts most.

For color-focused users, AOC claims 100% coverage of the sRGB gamut and 99% of DCI-P3, along with excellent factory calibration targeting Delta E under 1. Combined with OLED’s natural contrast, the monitor is positioned to deliver rich color and deep blacks. AOC also notes improved black levels in brighter rooms, addressing a common complaint about OLED and QD-OLED displays in well-lit environments.

The curvature is aggressive at 800R, which is designed to wrap the image more tightly into your peripheral vision—something many ultrawide fans enjoy for racing games, flight sims, and immersive titles. It can feel intense if you’re coming from a flatter monitor, but it’s a deliberate choice for a more enveloping ultrawide experience.

Connectivity looks well-equipped for modern PCs and consoles. Ports include DisplayPort 2.1, two HDMI 2.1 inputs, and USB-C with DisplayPort Alt Mode plus 15W power delivery. There’s also USB-B and three USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports for peripherals. Productivity and multi-system setups get extra help from features like KVM support, picture-in-picture, and picture-by-picture modes—useful for swapping between a gaming PC and a laptop or viewing multiple sources at once.

On the design side, AOC is leaning into gamer aesthetics with RGB lighting, including an asymmetric pentagonal lighting setup on the back of the monitor.

Price and availability are now clearer, at least in China. The AOC Agon Pro AGP346UCSD is listed for pre-order at 6,999 yuan, or roughly $1,025 when converted. A broader global launch hasn’t been confirmed yet, but AOC often releases products outside China, so availability in other regions may follow later.

For shoppers who like the idea of a 34-inch OLED ultrawide but want to spend less, there are already more affordable 34-inch OLED alternatives on the market—though they may not match this model’s combination of 360 Hz performance, tandem OLED design, and peak brightness claims.