Skip to main content

Samsung confirms ultrabright 77-inch QD-OLED panel for CES 2023. Will it be a TV?

Read and watch our complete CES coverage here
Updated less than 21 hours ago

Samsung Display has confirmed it will be showing a newly developed 77-inch variant of its QD-OLED panel technology at CES 2023. Whether Samsung Electronics will follow suit with an announcement about a 77-inch QD-OLED TV remains to be seen for now, but I expect to know more within the early days of the show. The new QD-OLED panel has been dubbed “QD-OLED 2023” and the company claims it can exceed 2,000 nits of brightness.

Samsung Display says the impressive new levels of brightness have been achieved through a combination of new panel design — new “OLED HyperEfficient EL” material which improves the color brightness of each RGB — and new optimization software dubbed IntelliSense AI.

Recommended Videos

It was at CES 2022 that we got our first glimpse of Samsung Display’s QD-OLED panel technology. At the time, it struck me as mightily impressive — the best picture quality I’d ever seen.

Since that time, QD-OLED panels have been released as consumer products via Samsung Electronics’ S95B TV, the Sony A95K TV, and two Dell Alienware monitors. Each of those products was hailed as best-in-class, both by Digital Trends’ reviewers and those across the media landscape. With perfect black levels and higher color brightness than LG’s WOLED technology, QD-OLED screens are indeed a treat for the eyes.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Still, among consumers, complaints about limited screen-size options became a common refrain. Many TV enthusiasts claim to have held off on investing in the new TV type until it was available in a larger size. Now, it appears a 77-inch QD-OLED TV may be on the way. But that’s not a foregone conclusion.

Samsung's new 77-inch QD-OLED TV with vibrant picture on screen
Image used with permission by copyright holder

While Samsung Display assured me at CES 2022 that its new QD-OLED panel would appear in a consumer TV that year, they could not guarantee that TV would be made by Samsung Electronics. Granted, a few weeks later, the formal announcement of the S95B TV’s existence was made, but my understanding is that there was some internal discussion over if/when that TV might be brought to market.

Of course, if Samsung Electronics hadn’t made a TV out of it, Sony would have. And that is likely the case here with the new 77-inch size option, though Samsung Display will also be showing 55-, 65-, and 34-inch versions of these displays too.

In the same press release, Samsung Display also mentioned a 49-inch Ultrawide version of the new QD-OLED panel that’s clearly destined to be a gaming computer monitor, and one likely made by Dell’s Alienware division. Other product mentions include a new flexible hybrid QD-OLED display, a slideable display, and a digital cockpit made of QD-OLED panels. We’ll be sure to bring you up close to all of these products as we continue our CES 2023 coverage.

It may be hours, days, or weeks until we have a firm confirmation, but all signs point to a 77-inch QD-OLED TV hitting the market in 2023.

Caleb Denison
Digital Trends Editor at Large Caleb Denison is a sought-after writer, speaker, and television correspondent with unmatched…
OLED vs. LED: Which kind of TV display is better?
LG G1 OLED evo vs. Sony A90J OLED.

If you're shopping for a new TV, you've probably stumbled upon products that use OLED, LED, QLED, and even QD-OLED to describe their display. The world of electronics moves fast, and while the world was once in the throes of debating plasma vs. LCD, the game has now shifted to focus on an assortment of LED-based designs.

Trying to wrap your head around all the jargon can be challenging, especially since many of the terms look and sound nearly identical. Toss in quality disparities between brands and price tags that run from a few hundred bucks to well over $2,000, and it's easy to get overwhelmed when looking for TVs.

Read more
You Asked: Samsung QD-OLED conundrum, ATSC 3.0, and audio outputs
You Asked Feature Ep 20

We're back and sinally recovered from CES in Las Vegas. And this week, we’ve got a slew of great questions. Like the emotional journey of choosing between the Samsung S95C or S90C. Plus Zen and the art of eARC. And why is my ATSC 3.0 tuner slow? And why can’t TVs have all the ports we need?

 TV-buying journey

Read more
Sharp secretly revealed the first QDEL TV at CES
Sharp's prototype QDEL TV is shown at CES 2024.

CES is exactly the place where you expect companies to show up and absolutely wow you with bleeding-edge tech. We're talking about a tantalizing view of the future, the kind of stuff that might not reach the mainstream for a few years. At CES 2024, that sort of futuristic TV technology almost didn't get that moment. And then, literally as he was packing his bags to head home, Digital Trends' Caleb Denison heard a rumor that Sharp Display Technology Corporation was quietly showing the future of TV to a very small number of people.

That rumor proved to be accurate, and Denison was among the first people to see not just one, but two working prototypes of a QDEL TV.

Read more