cua cà mau cua tươi sống cua cà mau bao nhiêu 1kg giá cua hôm nay giá cua cà mau hôm nay cua thịt cà mau cua biển cua biển cà mau cách luộc cua cà mau cua gạch cua gạch cà mau vựa cua cà mau lẩu cua cà mau giá cua thịt cà mau hôm nay giá cua gạch cà mau giá cua gạch cách hấp cua cà mau cua cốm cà mau cua hấp mua cua cà mau cua ca mau ban cua ca mau cua cà mau giá rẻ cua biển tươi cuaganic cua cua thịt cà mau cua gạch cà mau cua cà mau gần đây hải sản cà mau cua gạch son cua đầy gạch giá rẻ các loại cua ở việt nam các loại cua biển ở việt nam cua ngon cua giá rẻ cua gia re crab farming crab farming cua cà mau cua cà mau cua tươi sống cua tươi sống cua cà mau bao nhiêu 1kg giá cua hôm nay giá cua cà mau hôm nay cua thịt cà mau cua biển cua biển cà mau cách luộc cua cà mau cua gạch cua gạch cà mau vựa cua cà mau lẩu cua cà mau giá cua thịt cà mau hôm nay giá cua gạch cà mau giá cua gạch cách hấp cua cà mau cua cốm cà mau cua hấp mua cua cà mau cua ca mau ban cua ca mau cua cà mau giá rẻ cua biển tươi cuaganic cua cua thịt cà mau cua gạch cà mau cua cà mau gần đây hải sản cà mau cua gạch son cua đầy gạch giá rẻ các loại cua ở việt nam các loại cua biển ở việt nam cua ngon cua giá rẻ cua gia re crab farming crab farming cua cà mau
Skip to main content

Samsung Display’s QD-OLED TV first look: Best. Picture. Ever.

I was beginning to think it was the tech unicorn of CES 2022.: A quantum dot OLED display that, by specs and science alone, had the potential to revolutionize TV picture quality. Then I saw it up close, and I’m here to tell you it is the best-looking image I’ve ever seen from a screen. And not by an incremental margin, either. I hate the term “game-changer,” but it absolutely applies here. I couldn’t be more excited for this massive leap forward for TVs in 2022.

How I finally came to see Samsung Display’s QD-OLED (important note: This is not a consumer television from Samsung Electronics) is an adventurous tale unto its own, and one best left for another story. Here, I want to focus on what I saw and why I am convinced that this latest adaptation to OLED display technology is the most exciting thing I’ve seen since the introduction of HDR TVs.

Caleb Denison at Samsung Display at CES 2022.
Brandon Walsh

You may have read or watched reports about QD-OLED that were based on technical briefings, but they are full of speculation and educated guesswork. As one of the few TV reviewers who has been fortunate enough to put their eyes on this technology, I’d like to offer some unique perspectives based on both subjective and objective analysis.

QD-OLED isn’t just the usual CES hype — this tech is for real.

Recommended Videos

What is QD-OLED, again?

To understand what makes QD-OLED different from conventional OLED, it’s important to understand how conventional OLED TVs work.

The OLED panels available on the market today are manufactured by LG Display (like Samsung Display, you can think of LG Display as a separate sister company to LG Electronics)  and used by LG, Sony, Panasonic, and several other brands in OLED TVs. They are WRGB OLEDs, which is to say there is a white OLED subpixel (that’s the W in WRGB) used to boost the brightness of red, green, and blue (RGB) OLED pixels. It’s a solution that has worked well for several years now — OLED TVs consistently sit at the top of our list of the best TVs you can buy. But it is not without its drawbacks, and those drawbacks all point back to the use of a color filter and white subpixel.

QD-OLED panels get rid of the white subpixel and color filter entirely by using an all-blue OLED panel with a sheet of printed quantum dots that shine red and green when activated by the blue OLED light. The result is a true RGB display. Without the color filter, overall brightness is increased significantly. And without the white subpixel, the brightness of colors is also significantly boosted.

Other promised benefits to QD-OLED displays are consistent color saturation when viewed off-angle, and significantly reduced potential for burn-in.

In other words, QD-OLED keeps all the advantages of WRGB OLED and mitigates its few (but significant) drawbacks. On paper, this sounds very exciting. But tech reporters have rightfully remained skeptical, pending in-person viewing.

Samsung QD-OLED display at CES 2022.
Digital Trends

QD-OLED is the truth

After sitting through a short briefing, I was shown Samsung Display’s QD-OLED display, mocked up as a TV. It didn’t have a tuner, smart TV interface, or several other things that make a TV a TV. But the proof of what it is capable of was accurately represented in the demonstration I saw, and it was nothing short of astonishing.

QD-OLED’s higher brightness and superior color saturation has a tremendously dazzling and delightful impact, and the display tech’s ability to show much higher levels of detail in dark, shadowy areas is immediately apparent. What I experienced was a picture with incredible detail, depth, richness, and zeal. It simultaneously was vivid and deep, with an almost 3D-like effect.

Once I calmed my own excitement a bit, I dug a little deeper and noticed that the white light it produced was of much higher purity than the whites I’m used to seeing from WRGB OLED TVs, which tend to have a green tint. That tint isn’t something you notice when watching an OLED TV on its own, but it is impossible not to see it when it sits next to LED TVs and, in this case, the QD-OLED.

Off-angle viewing also was clearly superior. Any degradation in picture quality from well off to the side was difficult to discern without deep scrutiny. And frankly, it probably isn’t something most viewers would notice anyway.

In a separate demonstration, where a 34-inch computer monitor version of the tech was at work, I noted a complete absence of motion blur from quick-scrolling test patterns. This was real-world proof of QD-OLED’s 0.5ms response time for TVs, and 0.1ms response time for computing displays. Text was also significantly sharper than what I’ve seen from conventional OLED displays.

Clearly, QD-OLED is going to be as exciting for gamers as it is for videophiles.

Samsung QD-OLED display at CES 2022.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

QD-OLED will be here later this year, but it’s going to cost you.

When can you buy QD-OLED?

The good news is that the wait for a QD-OLED TV won’t be long. A representative at Sony informed me the company is targeting a late spring 2022 launch for its Bravia A95K QD-OLED TV. The bad news is that I expect that TV to be extremely expensive.

For its part, Dell’s Alienware gaming division has already shown off a 34-inch widescreen gaming monitor using QD-OLED and promises it is coming soon. Again, I expect that fine piece of hardware to be jaw-droppingly expensive compared to even the most expensive gaming monitors available today.

As for Samsung? Who knows. While Samsung Display makes the technology, Samsung Electronics — which makes the TVs we put in our homes — is remaining tight-lipped with any details around a Samsung-branded QD-OLED TV. I do, however, expect we will have some more information on a Samsung QD-OLED TV (they will probably call it QD-Display, because Samsung) in early March 2022.

For rich people first — then the rest of us

As is often the case with groundbreaking tech, it will be too expensive for most folks when it is first launched, then will come down in price over the course of several years. It may be some time until you or I could hope to own a QD-OLED TV, but just knowing that we can someday have such a stunning picture in our homes one day is a bright future to which I very much look forward.

Caleb Denison
Digital Trends Editor at Large Caleb Denison is a sought-after writer, speaker, and television correspondent with unmatched…
First look: Telly’s free TV just might be able to pull this off
The secondary Smart Display on a Telly TV.

Telly is a 55-inch LCD television with a built-in soundbar and secondary Smart Display. And it's free. Phil Nickinson / Digital Trends

In hindsight, the skepticism over Telly — a 55-inch LCD TV that the company is giving away for “free” — was understandable. Warranted, even. After all, there’s a reason I put “free” in quotes like that. Telly isn’t just any old 55-incher that you can find in any store. It’s a 55-incher with a built in soundbar, webcam, far-field microphone array — and a 10-inch-tall “Smart Screen” that lives under the main panel and shows (among many other things) advertising.

Read more
Samsung’s new QD-OLED panels get Pantone’s stamp of approval for color accuracy
A QD-OLED display at Samsung Display's CES 2024 booth.

CES 2024 has been dominated by TV manufacturers touting massive increases in brightness. You can count Samsung among them, but with a slight twist -- the giant electronics firm says its latest QD-OLED TV panels aren't just bright, they're also color-accurate, and it says it has the receipts to prove it.

Specifically, we're talking about Samsung Display -- the Samsung subsidiary that designs and fabricates the displays that eventually get integrated into TVs you can buy from companies like Samsung Electronics and Sony (yes, Sony's QD-OLED TVs use Samsung Display panels).

Read more
Alienware’s new second-gen QD-OLED monitors are stunning
The Alienware 32 4K QD-OLED on a table with a game on the screen.

The Alienware 34 QD-OLED took the world by storm. As the first really great OLED gaming monitor, it had little in the way of competition.

But in 2024, that's not true. And to keep its lead, Alienware has launched two new QD-OLED gaming monitors that take things even further. There is now a 32-inch 4K model (AW3225QF) and a 27-inch QHD model (AW2725DF), both of which use the second-generation QD-OLED tech from Samsung Display. I got to see both models in person at a preview event ahead of CES 2024, and I came away extremely excited for these new gaming monitors.

Read more