Genesis89 wrote:So basically if I upgrade to the LG text wont be anymore blurry than it already is?
It's the same DPI as 24" 1080p, so everything should look just as sharp. The main difference to IQ will be the VA vs TN issue, not the pixel density.
Secondly would you consider that dell the best 1440p 27" should I go the 27" route to save $?
I can't tell you what screen size you should get

That's up to you. All I can tell you is that, personally, my 27" display is big enough
for me when playing games and using the desktop for work, but I would probably be OK with 32" (I can always push it back away from me for desktop work,) and, finally, that I'm not a big fan of ultra-wide displays. So that stuff is really a list of personal preferences, not recommendations.
My actual recommendations are: having g-sync, having a panel that does not have pixel inversion artifacts and that has better gamma and contrast (that means I recommend IPS and VA more than TN, unless you really can't stand IPS and VA glow and prefer TN color/gamma shift instead.) The exception is if you prefer ULMB instead of g-sync, in which case you should probably go for a TN panel, as IPS and VA have more crosstalk in ULMB mode. Again, the other post I linked to (
viewtopic.php?f=2&t=4384&p=34513#p34509) has videos where the pcmonitors.info reviewer talks about IPS/VA vs TN advantages and disadvantages.
The monitor recommendations of pcmonitors.info seem rather solid to me:
https://pcmonitors.info/recommendations
As of right now, if we consider g-sync as a must-have (which I personally do), we basically get the Dell S2417DG, the Dell S2716DG(R), and the LG 32GK850G as good choices for a gaming monitor.
They don't have a recommendation for a 27" IPS or VA at 1440p. I'm using a ViewSonic XG2703-GS, which is a 27" 1440p 165Hz g-sync and I can recommend it, if you can still find it. There's 4 monitors from different brands with this panel in total (Asus, Acer, AOC and ViewSonic.) They're 2016 models though and thus might be more difficult to find, and there's a bit of a panel lottery going on where some units have backlight bleed. I happened to get a virtually "perfect" unit with no bleed to speak of, and it's very good. The colors are calibrated a bit better out of the box compared to the other brands. Compared to LG's VA monitor, you do get a bit better pixel response times, but it doesn't seem to be a major difference according to the reviews (meaning the LG seems to have slightly more ghosting, but you need to be looking close to see the difference.)
Finally, no matter which one of those monitors you pick, it will be a big upgrade to your current one when it comes to image quality and motion fluidity and clarity.