Flat vs 1500R: is a curved monitor actually worth it?
The most common curve on modern gaming monitors — and how it compares to a traditional flat panel.
A 1500R monitor has the radius of a 1.5 metre (about 59-inch) circle — a gentle, barely-noticeable curve when viewed from the typical 60-80 cm desk distance. It's the dominant curvature on 27-inch to 34-inch gaming and productivity panels in 2026 because it's the least-aggressive radius that still wraps your peripheral vision without distorting the image. A flat panel is the simpler, universal choice, with no curve-related trade-offs for off-axis viewing or content creation.
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See the curves side-by-side
Both rendered as a 34" 21:9 ultrawide, top-down view.
Side-by-side specs
| Spec | Flat | 1500R |
|---|---|---|
| Curvature radius | Infinite (none) | 1500 mm (1.5 m) |
| Ideal viewing distance | Any | ~1.5 m (59 in) |
| Typical desk distance (60-80 cm) | Optimal | Slight over-curve |
| Immersion on 27" | Standard | Marginally better (better on this spec) |
| Immersion on 34" ultrawide | Noticeable edge reach | Visibly easier (better on this spec) |
| Off-axis viewing (shared use) | Neutral (better on this spec) | Image distorts off-centre |
| Straight-line accuracy (CAD / design) | Perfect (better on this spec) | Slight edge warp |
| Wall-mount aesthetics | Clean | Proud from the wall |
| Common availability (2026) | Universal | Most mainstream curve (better on this spec) |
| Typical price premium | — | +$20-60 |
| Good for single-user gaming | Good | Better (better on this spec) |
| Good for productivity | Better | Good |
How they differ
The theoretical ideal viewing distance for a curved panel equals the radius — sit 1.5 m from a 1500R and the curve exactly matches the natural arc your eye would sweep to scan the screen. At real desk distance (60-80 cm) you're well inside that radius, so the curve mostly shows up as a faint wrap at the edges rather than dramatic immersion. Flat panels, by contrast, are geometrically neutral: every pixel sits the same distance from a perpendicular viewer, which matters for CAD, photography, and layout work where straight lines need to stay straight. The gap grows with screen width — on a 24-27" panel the flat-vs-1500R difference is subtle; on a 34" ultrawide, the 1500R curve measurably reduces the head-turn needed to read the edges.
Verdict
For a single-user desk setup at a 16:9 27-32" size, the choice is mostly preference and price — 1500R wraps slightly but isn't transformative. On 34-inch and wider ultrawides, 1500R is the better default because the geometry finally matters. Keep flat for content creation, multi-viewer use (shared displays), or anyone sensitive to edge distortion in straight lines.
Visualise curvature radiusWhich should you pick?
Choose Flat
Pick flat for content-creation work (photo, video, CAD, UI design) where geometric accuracy matters, for multi-viewer scenarios, or for any 16:9 panel 27 inches or smaller where the curve adds little real value.
See a 32" 4K flat productivity panelChoose 1500R
Pick 1500R for gaming and mixed-use on 34-inch and wider panels, or for dedicated gaming 27-32" monitors where the mild immersion boost and slightly easier edge-reading are welcome. It's the safe modern default.
See a 34" 1500R ultrawide sweet spotRelated comparisons
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