Though if you look at a guide to TV size and resolution you'll see this is almost all pointless, human perception is such that it's wasted information at sensible viewing distances.
There's a lot of fud about that, all I can say is on a PHONE screen I can tell the difference between 720p, 1080p, 1440p YouTube videos with my glasses off. I can't see all the detail, but its more comfortable to watch because the image is more seamless and clearer.
For decades they told us the eye can only see 16.7 million colours, then HDR came along and its a night/day difference, yet current TVs can't even display all the detail on a modern UHD Bluray. The fact is there's a lot you might not immediately be able to tell in a blind test, but you can "feel" the difference.
My PC monitor looks fine, my OLED TV looks amazing on HDR content, my MacBook Pro blows them both away. Nobody can tell me high resolution does not matter, because I can see it with my own eyes. When it comes to gaming even more so, as you need that extra detail to hide aliasing from 3D rendering. That's before you even get into frame-rate.
A lot of people misunderstand that higher resolution is not about being able to pick out every little detail in the image, its about the image being detailed enough so you CAN'T, making it seamless.