I am also a 3 monitor guy. Then I became a 4 monitor guy when one more got wall mounted above the center screen. I had 3 flat 27" screens, then side-graded to a curved 1000R 27" IPS in the center. Having a curved screen in the center and flats on the side was actually a really good experience for me. I did like it.
I then side-graded to a 4k center panel and I like it ok, but it’s different. The resolution inconsistency is not handled amazingly by windows, but it’s ok. Some apps freak out when you have different pixel densities on different displays.
I have used some large individual panels and it is not the same vibe as a nice multi panel setup. Windows 11 has helped a lot by including a solid window manager that helps with tiling. But again it’s just a different vibe when it comes to workflow and focus for me.
3x 4k or 3x 1440p would be my route, assuming the features you need are within your price range. Basic 1440 and 4k panels have gotten really cheap
I am also a 3 monitor guy. Then I became a 4 monitor guy when one more got wall mounted above the center screen. I had 3 flat 27" screens, then side-graded to a curved 1000R 27" IPS in the center. Having a curved screen in the center and flats on the side was actually a really good experience for me. I did like it.
I then side-graded to a 4k center panel and I like it ok, but it’s different. The resolution inconsistency is not handled amazingly by windows, but it’s ok. Some apps freak out when you have different pixel densities on different displays.
I have used some large individual panels and it is not the same vibe as a nice multi panel setup. Windows 11 has helped a lot by including a solid window manager that helps with tiling. But again it’s just a different vibe when it comes to workflow and focus for me.
3x 4k or 3x 1440p would be my route, assuming the features you need are within your price range. Basic 1440 and 4k panels have gotten really cheap