As much as the most productive OLED televisions are in charge, there is a domain in which there is still margin of improvement: brightness. Even elite models are a bit dark compared to the mini-eld, and that is anything that has been functioning specifically. LG G4 is specifically brighter than G3, and this in turn is specifically brighter than its predecessor. And now, it seems that OLED LG 2025 televisions will be even more brilliant.
A new report says that LG will be bringing a new four-layer OLED TV panel to market this year, and that this will be significantly brighter than the three-layer panel in its current flagship TVs.
According to display industry analyst Ross Young, as reported by FlatpanelsHD, LG has been developing a four-layer OLED TV panel with an additional light-emitting layer of pixels; that panel tech is expected to reach the market this year “with a peak brightness of 3,700 nits”. That’s exceptionally bright for an OLED, though bear in mind that LG Display (which makes the panels) claimed last year that its latest-gen panel (as used in the LG G4) could hit 3,000 nits, and the TV was never close to hitting that (nor did it promise to).
LG has already shown off this new OLED tech: it displayed a small prototype at the IMID conference in South Korea back in August, telling reporters that the tech would not only boost brightness by 25%, but would deliver a longer lifespan and better energy efficiency too.
The LG demonstrates did not say when the symptoms would arrive to the market. But the LG G5 2025 has already revealed with a 165 Hz screen, and has been indexed in the Hong Kong electronic certification formula with informed energy figures that recommend that the new generation of panels be inside: its consumption is indexed as 132W For 55 inches and 55 inches and 164W style for the 65 -inch version, which is around 20% decrease that 161W and 209W for G4 styles.
This suggests that the new panel is about to begin, the LG screen is not indexed as one of the corporations that appear in those 2025 – LG as a whole, and we hope that the company announce its new televisions there.
But when this screen is announced, it does not wait for it in the LG 2025 panels: the power intake indicated in the C5 database is slightly another of the C4, which suggests that it will not be a top.
LG isn’t the only big name working on better panels. Samsung is doing it too. The same industry analyst, Ross Young, says that the 2025/26 QD-OLED panels will boost brightness even further to 3,600 nits or more, and possibly as much as 4,000 nits. The OLED TV arms race continues…
The writer, announcer, musician and obsessive Gadget of Kitchen Carrie Marshall writes in generation since 1998, contributing to the recommendation of wise and reviews to all kinds of magazines and internet sites, as well as writing more than a dozen books. His memoirs, Carrie Kill A Man, is already on sale and his next book, about pop music, was released in 2025. She is the singer of the Glaswegian Mind Mind Mind group.
Amazon Fire TV Mini-Led television review: The Best Fire TV to date and a forged for sports and games
HDR10 + vs Dolby Vision: What HDR is the best?
These five reviews this week are warmer, of Nvidia’s sublimely difficult RTX Five090 on this ridiculously expansive 110-inch TV
Techradar is a component of Long Run US INC, an organization of foreign media and leader virtual editor. Visit our business site.