This is the best time in a decade to splurge on a premium OLED TV

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I’ve been saying this for years and it’s never been more true than right now: you can get a truly excellent TV for well under $1,000. Just take a look at TCL’s 6-Series, Hisense’s U8H, or any number of Vizio sets, and you’ll quickly understand that there’s no need to break the bank for captivating picture quality.

But if you’ve got the money to spend, let me tell you: 2023 is the year to treat yourself to a high-end OLED TV. We’re seeing the convergence of several technology improvements that have led to new highs in brightness, color reproduction, and more impactful HDR than ever before. Competition is also (finally) heating up. Having spent years dominating the OLED TV panel market with no foes in sight, LG Display is now locked in a head-to-head battle with Samsung Display’s still-new QD-OLED technology. And whenever competition ramps up, consumers stand to benefit. Already, we’re seeing QD-OLED panels in products from Samsung Electronics, Sony, and Alienware.

The long-held downside of OLED TVs has been that they aren’t the best choice for bright rooms that catch a lot of sun. Those environments are where Mini LED TVs from Hisense and TCL can really pull ahead. Samsung, LG, and Sony also make great Mini LED sets, but more relevant to this discussion is that all three companies have just begun shipping their most radiant OLEDs ever that turn the old conventional wisdom on its head. There are still advantages to choosing Mini LED TVs over OLED in some cases: they’re still likely to maintain an overall brightness lead, and you can find an excellent one for far less money than what LG’s G3 or Samsung’s S95C will cost you. But that lead in brightness has shrunk considerably, and when you factor in all the other appealing aspects of OLED — deep blacks, wide viewing angles, luscious color, and great gaming capabilities — it’s a very compelling package.

Welcome to the OLED brightness wars

OLED TVs have gradually been chipping away at the brightness advantage of LCD TVs over the last few years. LG has managed to make small but noticeable year-over-year improvements with both its flagship G-series and mainstream C-series OLED lineups for a few generations in a row. LG has also built out a great reputation with gamers through strong support of features like VRR, Dolby Vision gaming, and consistently top-notch visuals. 

Things took an interesting turn in 2022 when the first QD-OLED (quantum dot) TVs hit the market. Because QD-OLEDs are true RGB displays, they can maintain higher color brightness and keep reds, greens, and blues looking vivid even at peak luminance. LG’s “WOLED” panels have a white subpixel that’s designed to help boost overall brightness, but competitors claim this can shave off some saturation when WOLED displays are pushed as bright as they can go. Is any of this perceptible to TV buyers? Considering the rave reviews LG’s sets continue to earn, it seems unlikely. Side-by-side comparisons of last year’s G2 and Samsung’s S95B did corroborate that the latter delivers superior color brightness, but it’s the kind of thing you’d only pick up on if they were right next to each other. I think the more important outcome from the debut of QD-OLED is that it was a shot in the arm for LG Display, which couldn’t rest on its laurels anymore. After seeing the strong reception of Samsung’s S95B, LG came up with an innovative way to strike back: that’s the new G3, which I’ll cover shortly.

But Samsung isn’t slowing down, either. For 2023, it’s dialing up the rivalry even further. Samsung Display’s second-generation QD-OLED panels can hit a peak brightness of 2,000 nits; that’s double what the S95B was capable of, and it’s a level of brightness that will be perfectly visible no matter how much sun your living room is coated in. So far, reviews of the flagship S95C (which uses the new panel) have hailed it as a “superb” TV that’s stunning from any angle. 


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$3298

The S95C is Samsung’s flagship QD-OLED TV — now with even better brightness than the impressive S95B. This 4K TV offers dazzling HDR, superb color luminance, and runs the company’s Tizen software with plenty of streaming apps at the ready.

Sure, the HDR highlights are dazzling when watching movies at night, but the S95C is said to be more than capable when it comes to SDR daytime viewing. This is where I gently remind those who care that Samsung continues to ignore Dolby Vision altogether, instead sticking with its own HDR10 Plus spec. The omission remains a sticking point for some, but it’s been the lay of the land with Samsung for years at this point — so much so that Apple added support for HDR10 Plus to the third-gen Apple TV 4K.

LG’s answer for QD-OLED is… billions of tiny lenses

So what about LG, then? After ruling over the OLED TV market for so long, the company isn’t about to let Samsung muscle its way in and steal its thunder. But the reality is that LG Display doesn’t have some fancy brand-new flavor of display technology with which to fend off QD-OLED. It’s still working with WOLED panels, so how much more can it squeeze from those displays? Can it go significantly brighter than the LG G2 from last year? 

A few weeks ago, I visited LG Electronics out in Los Angeles to get an up-close look at the company’s 2023 TV lineup led by the G3. And I learned that the answers to the above questions are a lot, and yes it can. The solution LG came up with was to make its latest high-end OLEDs more efficient than ever before. WOLED displays contain several layers (including a color filter), and some of the light from the self-emissive pixels is inevitably lost or trapped within the TV without ever reaching your eyes. 

To overcome this, LG Display is using what it calls a “micro lens array” — there are billions of microscopic convex lenses layered over the OLED pixels that maximize light emission and prevent some of the bounceback and internal reflections that previous panels suffered from. LG also utilizes “light-boosting algorithms” to crank the brightness further. Don’t expect to see LG Electronics talking about micro lenses in its marketing: the company refers to the new tech under a simpler “Brightness Booster Max” branding.


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LG G3 OLED (55-inch)

$25008% off
$2300

The LG G3 is a high-end TV with the brightest picture of any OLED that the company has ever produced. Combine that with perfect blacks, superb viewing angles, and top-notch gaming specs, and the G3 makes for a compelling package.

No matter what you call it, the result is a display that’s 22 percent more energy-efficient: LG can reach the same brightness as before using less power, which means it can now drive the panel to an even higher peak without risking its longevity. Viewing angles are also improved, and if you’ve seen any LG OLED in recent memory, they were already stellar. But this was another area where QD-OLED inched slightly ahead, and now, LG is leveling the playing field again. In HDR Vivid mode, the G3 can hit “roughly” 2,040 nits, from what LG told the media gathering. The more color accurate HDR Cinema mode tops out at 1,400 nits. The latter still easily beats last year’s flagship G2, which peaked at slightly over 900 nits. Note that only the 55-inch (the smallest option available), 65-inch, and 75-inch sizes of the G3 use micro lens array tech; the 83-incher does not. 

All OLED TVs (including both QD-OLED and WOLED) have auto-dimming algorithms that kick in to avoid burn-in if you pause on a very bright scene. LG goes a step beyond its fellow TV manufacturers by backing the G3 with a five-year panel warranty. 

LG’s webOS TV software also picks up some handy refinements this year. You can customize the slide-out quick settings menu however you’d like and put your most-used adjustments in easy reach. The homescreen includes new “Quick Cards” that group apps and services into themed categories like home office, gaming, sports, music, and so on. And LG’s 2023 TV lineup supports the Matter smart home standard. I still don’t like the overall presentation as much as Google TV, but it’s easier to get where you need to now.


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webOS still isn’t my favorite TV software, but at least now it’s more organized.
Image: LG

During the Los Angeles gathering, LG compared its latest and greatest against last year’s best from the competition. That’s always how it works at these press events and is partially due to different release timing among TV makers. The company insists that the G3 is a suitable adversary for Samsung’s QD-OLED televisions. I examined both up close with a loupe to inspect the pixel-level differences between WOLED and QD-OLED. Good luck spotting those micro lenses with human eyes, though: there are 42.4 billion of them in the 77-inch G3.  

As I touched on earlier, the very brightest Mini LED TVs from Hisense and other brands are almost certain to outperform the G3 and S95C. The peak brightness levels of the OLEDs are measured on a very tiny section of the screen. But the gap is smaller than it’s ever been, and I wouldn’t hesitate to steer anyone toward these 2023 flagship OLEDs, regardless of the viewing conditions of whatever room they’re going in. We’ve arrived at a point where OLED TVs continue to make good on their usual strengths — perfect blacks, brilliant contrast, and excellent gaming chops — while delivering all-important brightness gains that will likely convince many people with aging OLED sets to finally make an upgrade this year. Inevitably, there will be more enhancements in 2024, but I’d expect them to be more iterative than the brightness breakthroughs we’re seeing right now.

I doubt I’d be saying any of this if not for the recent surge in competition between LG Display and Samsung Display. For the benefit of home theater nerds worldwide (myself included), I hope their rivalry and one-upmanship only intensify from here. 


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▲亞洲新媒體高峰會12月19日登場。(圖/亞洲新媒體高峰會)

記者陳俐穎/綜合報導

由新媒體暨影視音發展協會 (NMEA,New Media Entertainment Association)主辦的台灣最大泛內容產業盛會「2023 亞洲新媒體高峰會」,將於12月19日、20日在台北舉行。今年接任的新任理事長、台灣大哥大新媒體服務副總經理李芃君指出,今年高峰會主軸「全面賦能」 (EMPOWERING),不只定位在台灣,而是一個Asia Hub,以亞洲或台灣為中心,和國際接軌。

「2023 亞洲新媒體高峰會」 今年規劃「國際內容趨勢」、「台流加速器」、「台灣人X好萊塢」、「科技X創意」、「跨界X出圈」、「風格至上世代」等6大主題方向,橫跨
二手收購電視、電影、娛樂、科技、網路等領域,高達19場專題演講或對談,與60位國內外重量級內容產業專家與領袖一起剖析內容產業趨勢。

>>限量席次,立即報名 2023 亞洲新媒體高峰會

為強化落實今年高峰會的主題「全面賦能」 (EMPOWERING),今年並擴大舉辦工作坊增加為7場,邀請海外專家與國際媒體集團面對面教學實作。包含三大國際企業集團Netflix、YouTube 、華納兄弟探索集團(Warner Bros. Discovery),與台流加速器的最大推手文策院,聯手舉辦4場系列共7堂課的賦能工作坊,針對內容產業相關的從業人員,從編劇、影視出海行銷、非實境節目格式製作、國際展會參與等不同構面,面對面提供完整的導覽解說,以及互動請益諮詢。

包括國際企業「華納兄弟探索集團 (Warner Bros. Discovery)」、YouTube、Netflix、美國獨立製片公司、好萊塢最新科技開發、Media Partner Asia(MPA)等海外講者來台分享。

開場的第一場關鍵對談「台流軟實力 V.S. 台灣產業升級轉型及全球輸出」邀請LINE台灣董事長暨LINE TV執行長陳立人,從自製的獨家戲劇內容出發,與談國家發展基金管理會副執行秘書蔡宜兼、緯來
二手收購電視台董事長李鍾培、中保科技集團董事長林建涵,切入影視資本市場來探討產業趨勢與轉型的契機。

除此之外,今年號召到知識型 Youtuber 志祺七七、新媒體創作者 HOWHOW 陳孜昊、美學經濟國際董事長李含仁也是插畫家「我是馬克」,出席高峰會現身探討娛樂體驗商機的多重開發。「我是馬克」也為高峰會親自設計兩款便條紙,這兩天報名參加者將可現場體驗 IP 商品化的魅力。

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