Lenovo’s Legion Pro 32UD-10 is the 4K OLED gaming monitor that finally feels aimed at my desk rather than my wallet. On paper it reads like a cheat code: a 31.5-inch UHD panel, 240 Hz refresh, 0.03 ms response, FreeSync Premium Pro and VESA Adaptive Sync, plus Dolby Vision and DisplayHDR True Black 400. In practice, it’s a gorgeous, fast, and adds enough creature comforts to make it compelling for both gaming and creative work—without the usual flagship tax.
Street pricing has been floating at around $1,600 which compared to the current crop of 32-inch 4K OLED’s is about $300 – 400 cheaper. And that’s before the various discounts that could bring that down closer to $1300. Now I don’t know about you but for me, every penny saved counts. So, big win to Lenovo already.

And it’s not like Lenovo compromised too much with this monitor. Specs are solid: 3840 × 2160 up to 240 Hz, OLED with true 10-bit, factory-calibrated colour (Delta E < 2), 99% sRGB/DCI-P3, ClearMR 13000, FreeSync Premium Pro and VESA Adaptive Sync, HDMI 2.1, DP 1.4, USB-C hub with PD, and a stand that does all the right ergonomic things. Eyesafe 2.0 certification is a nice cherry if your sessions run long, and VESA mounting is there if you want an arm. Nothing to scoff at.
The panel employed here is excellent. It’s Lenovo’s PureSight OLED which is factory-calibrated with Delta E under 2 and coverage for 99% sRGB and 99% DCI-P3. I trust it for YouTube thumbnails and Davinci Resolve color grades; gradients stay clean, skin tones don’t wander, and OLED’s per-pixel contrast preserves shadow detail. HDR isn’t lipstick here either: Dolby Vision and DisplayHDR True Black 400 give video the proper dynamic lift, and games benefit from deeper blacks and smoother highlight roll-off that LCDs struggle to mimic.
On the gaming side, it’s as fast as you hope. At 240 Hz, motion feels liquid and inputs are immediate, and ClearMR 13000 matches what I’m seeing—no telltale blur in fast pans. FreeSync means everything runs buttery smooth with no unsightly tears or stutters. Cyberpunk 2077 though shockingly, five years old at this point is still one helluva showpiece. With ray-tracing cranked all the way up and HDR running, the 32UD-10 is a sight to behold.
But even in something more frenetic like Battlefield 6 with it’s gorgeous maps and destruction effects pops on this display while still being smooth and responsive for those intense gunfights. Tracers and particle effects remain crisp and OLED contrast makes smoke, sun shafts, and shadowed corners look convincingly three-dimensional.
Ergonomics and design are another highlight. The white-and-black chassis absolutely sings. It’s a modern riff on the iconic white Alienware monitors of yesteryear without tipping into gamer caricature. No gaudy RGB here either, thank God. Three-sided NearEdgeless bezels keep the focus where it belongs: the image.

The signature Lenovo stand with hexagonal base and phone/ tablet slot returns here. It has generous lift, tilt, swivel, and pivot, the cable management is sensible. But that phone slot, while cool and matches the aesthetic isn’t something I reached for daily. Depending on how high you raise the screen, you won’t be able to stand the phone in portrait and lying it on its side is well, pointless. A small tablet could sit there better but I don’t own one to prove that theory.
Connectivity lands in the “mostly nailed” category. HDMI 2.1 handles consoles, DisplayPort 1.4 services the PC, and a USB-C one-cable solution with 15 W power delivery and hub access is genuinely useful. My daily rhythm is a gaming tower at night and a MacBook in the day; one USB-C cable shifts the Legion into productivity mode with peripherals and display in tow.
But the lack of a USB-B upstream to connect to my gaming rig seriously hinders the point of KVM functionality. You can approximate it through USB-C swapping, but you’d need quite the long cable and its irritating to keep doing anyway. A dedicated Type-B upstream port makes multi-host life cleaner—especially if you’re juggling dongles and interfaces.
Another wierd this is the lack of 3.5 mm headphone jack, and there are no speakers. On a premium gaming monitor, that’s odd. I don’t need room-filling audio, but a line-out would simplify desk wiring for anyone not running an external interface or purely wireless cans. It’s not a dealbreaker—just an eyebrow raise in a package that otherwise screams desktop centrality.
Compared to Asus’s PG32UCDM which delivers similar 4K/240 Hz OLED but also has better port selection though it’s several hundreds more than the Lenovo. Lenovo’s Dolby Vision support helps its case for mixed gaming and content though. Pixel peepers will argue sub-pixel layouts and firmware nuance; for a mixed gamer/creator desk in Australia, Lenovo’s balance of price, performance, and design is the winning story.

Verdict
The Lenovo Legion Pro 32UD-10 looks stunning, runs fast, and works hard. It nails creator-grade colour and HDR/Dolby Vision, brings genuinely elite gaming performance at 4K/240 Hz, and does it at a price that feels sensible rather than indulgent. USB-C PD and the hub earn daily utility points; the absence of USB-B upstream and a headphone jack stops me calling it perfect. The phone slot is fun but not that useful a feature. Taken as a whole, this is a great monitor—and a serious contender if you want 4K OLED without paying top-of-the-pyramid money. If your desk aesthetic leans white and your life straddles gaming and creation, this is the one to shortlist first.
Lenovo Australia kindly loaned the Legion Pro 32UD-10 to PowerUp for the purpose of this review.








