TCL may be able to fulfill your immersion needs if futuristic gaming monitors are what you desire. The business has developed the first dome-shaped display in history, essentially producing a monitor with horizontal and vertical edge curvature. This innovative approach will surely take your gaming experience to the next level.
The 31-inch display, which made its debut at DTC 2023 in Wuhan, China, has an OLED panel type with a refresh rate of 120Hz and a 4K resolution. According to TCL, playing games on this distinctive concave-style monitor feels like being in three dimensions. Although the company hasn’t released all the details, this is one of the most unusual goods we’ve seen recently.
The idea seems reasonable on paper since it attempts to simulate how a simulation might be created utilizing a surround-sound system of monitors. However, I’m not sure how it can compete with an expensive, curved, ultrawide gaming display at just 31 inches.
TCL has also unveiled the first 14-inch 2.8K IJP hybrid OLED screen for notebooks, as well as a new 65-inch 8K curved (1800R) OLED panel. The company unveiled the first 27-inch 8K display with a dynamic refresh rate of 120 Hz, going beyond OLED technology. It is purported to have a “2D/3D switchable light field display,” which enables smooth transitions between a conventional 2D display and an engrossing 3D experience without the need for glasses.
Additionally, the business unveiled a first peek at its upcoming 57-inch curved (1000R) Mini-LED screen, which has over 11,000 dimming zones, a refresh rate of 240Hz, and a response time of under 1 millisecond. It sounds similar to the Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 that debuted earlier this year, with a 32:9 aspect ratio and dual 4K resolution.
The world’s first 150-inch MLCD zero seam display, an 85-inch WHVA panel with a refresh rate of 144 Hz that covers 90% of the BT2020 color gamut, and a 2.1-inch true RGB LTPO-VR LCD with an astounding density of 1,727 pixels per inch are among the other new additions to TCL’s future display portfolio.
It’s crucial to note that these enhancements only apply to panels—not to a physical display. It’s unclear if other businesses will decide to include them in their next offerings.