Flash back almost exactly a year to the day. I was sitting in a half-built demo areaplaying on a Samsung prototypegaming monitor. The company had loaded upLies of P— one of my favorite games of last year — and I was proceeding through a midgame Mad Clown Puppet mini-boss. It wasn’t just standard gameplay, though. It was glasses-free 3D, and it worked well enough that I was able to play a game as difficult asLies of Pamid construction noise and blinding lights without breaking a sweat.
AtCES 2025, Samsung is turning that prototype into a real product with the Odyssey 3D.

Glasses-free 3D monitors have been around for a couple of years, but the Odyssey 3D separates itself from monitors like theAcer Predator SpatialLabs View 27with how it handles the 3D image. Most glasses-free 3D tech requires some sort of integration. In the case of SpatialLabs, you can only use the 3D effect on supported games. Samsung’s Odyssey 3D, on the other hand, uses light field display (LFD) tech to create 3D images from 2D content.
Samsung is able to pull this off with alenticular lens on the front panelof the monitor. This splits the image going to each eye, allowing them to receive slightly different perspectives to simulate that 3D effect. There’s a built-in stereo camera and constant view mapping, too, tracking your eyes as they move around to keep the 3D illusion from breaking.
The prototype I tried last year was already very impressive — so impressive that I was forgot I was sitting at a CES demo at all. Hopefully an extra year to cook has made the tech even better.
Originally, Samsung had called this the 2D/3D monitor, and that’s not a mistake. Not only can it simulate 3D on 2D content but the monitor also works in standard 2D mode. It comes with some respectable specs, too. It’s a 27-inch monitor packing a super-sharp 4K resolution, and it comes with a 165Hz refresh rate and 1ms gray-to-gray response time.
For now, Samsung is keeping some details under wraps. We don’t know what ports the monitor has, nor when it will release. Critically, Samsung also hasn’t revealed how much the Odyssey 3D will cost. I suspect it’ll run a pretty penny, but we’ll just have to wait until Samsung has more to share.