HP Omen Transcend 32 OLED Gaming Monitor: This Monitor Doesn't Just Show Black. It Disappears It.
You know that moment in a game when you walk into a dark room and the screen just turns into a gray, washed-out mess? That moment doesn't exist on this monitor.
The HP Omen Transcend 32 OLED isn't trying to be another 4K gaming display. It's trying to make every monitor you've used before feel like a placeholder.
Here's why people can't stop talking about it.

The Black Levels Are Not a Joke
This is a true QD-OLED panel, which means every single pixel turns completely off when it needs to be black. Not dim. Off. The result is a level of contrast that LED monitors physically cannot replicate, no matter how many local dimming zones they throw at the problem.
Pair that with a 1,500,000:1 static contrast ratio and HDR content doesn't just look brighter. It looks like it has actual depth.
240Hz. 0.03ms. Zero Excuses.
Four numbers that matter if you game competitively:
4K resolution. 240Hz refresh rate. 0.03 millisecond response time. Zero motion blur worth mentioning.

Most monitors make you choose between sharp and fast. This one refuses to choose. You get the pixel density to see everything and the speed to react before your brain even finishes processing it.
It's Basically Two Monitors Wearing One Body

Here's the part most people don't expect. HP built in something called OMEN Gear Switch, a one-button KVM that lets you flip between your gaming PC and your work laptop instantly, no cable swapping, no settings to dig through.
Plug in both. Hit a button. You're working. Hit it again. You're gaming.
And with 140W of USB-C power delivery, that same single cable can charge your laptop while it's connected. Most premium monitors top out at 90W. This one just kept going.
Built Loud, Stays Quiet

Quad speakers tuned with HyperX, an anti-reflective coating that actually does its job, and a cooling system working hard enough behind the scenes that you'll genuinely forget it's there. No fan noise creeping into your headset mic. No glare killing a dark scene at the worst possible moment.
The Honest Tradeoff
Nothing's perfect. The SDR brightness sits around 250 nits, which is on the modest side for daytime use in a bright room, and the stand handles height, tilt, and portrait rotation but skips swivel. If you're after a true do-everything productivity stand, that's worth knowing going in.
But for what this monitor is built to do, deliver a reference-quality picture at a speed competitive gamers actually need, those tradeoffs barely register.
The Bottom Line
The HP Omen Transcend 32 OLED isn't chasing hype. It's just quietly outperforming almost everything else in its class, at 4K, at 240Hz, with true blacks that make every other panel look like it's still trying.
Once you've seen black actually look black, going back is the hard part.
