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CESSamsungTech

Samsung unveils world’s first 130‑inch Micro RGB TV at CES 2026

Samsung’s 130‑inch Micro RGB TV promises OLED‑level contrast with LED brightness.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 6, 2026, 12:01 PM EST
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A Samsung 130‑inch Micro RGB TV displays a vivid image of the Leaning Tower of Pisa under a bright blue sky, mounted on a sleek stand labeled “Micro RGB 130” with a promotional wall behind highlighting features like ultra-precise RGB backlighting, AI pixel tuning, and VDE-certified color accuracy.
Image: Samsung
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Samsung’s latest ultra-premium TV isn’t just big, it’s architectural. The company has taken the wraps off the world’s first 130‑inch Micro RGB TV at CES 2026, a colossal R95H-series screen that is less “big TV on a wall” and more “digital window” dominating an entire living space.​

At 130 inches, this set is the largest Micro RGB display Samsung has built so far, aimed squarely at the kind of buyer who treats a TV as both a home theater upgrade and a status symbol. Samsung is framing this launch as a return to its older “technology as art” design philosophy, but with a distinctly 2026 twist: instead of trying to hide the TV, the company leans into its presence with what it calls the Timeless Frame, a chunky, gallery-style border that makes the display look like an oversized architectural window rather than a conventional black rectangle. The frame doesn’t just sit there for show either; it doubles as an audio enclosure, with speakers integrated into the perimeter so sound feels like it’s coming from the picture itself, scaled to match the sheer size of the panel.​

  • A Samsung 130‑inch Micro RGB TV stands in a minimalist concrete room, showing a serene winter scene of a lone evergreen tree in snow, with a snowy forest visible through large windows behind the screen, blending digital and natural landscapes.
  • A Samsung 130‑inch Micro RGB TV is framed like a gallery artwork, mounted on a concrete wall and showing a solitary tree in a snowy field under a pale sky; a wall label beside it titled “Timeless Frame” describes the piece’s theme of timelessness and immersive perception.

Under the design language and the marketing, the interesting bit is the technology: Micro RGB. For anyone trying to place it in the TV alphabet soup, Micro RGB isn’t the same as Samsung’s true Micro LED walls, and it’s not just another standard Mini LED either. Instead, think of it as a next‑gen backlight system: behind an LCD layer, the TV uses incredibly small red, green and blue LEDs as the light source instead of the usual white or blue LEDs found in typical LED and Mini LED sets. Because those microscopic RGB LEDs can be controlled in far smaller zones, they offer more precise local dimming, better color control and reduced light bleed between bright and dark regions of an image. The end result, in theory, is a picture that’s more color-accurate and higher in contrast than a regular Mini LED TV, while also capable of hitting brightness levels that OLED panels struggle to maintain across a large screen.​

Samsung is using this 130‑inch model as a showcase for its latest Micro RGB processing stack. The set is driven by the Micro RGB AI Engine Pro, which constantly analyzes what’s on screen to tweak color, contrast and clarity on a frame‑by‑frame basis, with dedicated features like Micro RGB Color Booster Pro and Micro RGB HDR Pro sitting on top. Samsung claims the TV can cover 100% of the BT.2020 color space through what it calls Micro RGB Precision Color 100, a spec that, if it holds up in independent testing, would put it at the bleeding edge of consumer color performance. The panel is also certified by VDE for precise color reproduction, and Samsung wraps all of that in its Glare Free treatment, a surface finish designed to tame reflections and keep colors from washing out in real living rooms with windows and lamps, not just darkened demo booths.​

From a content perspective, the 130‑inch Micro RGB is the first TV line to ship with HDR10+ Advanced, the next iteration of Samsung’s favored open HDR standard, designed to go toe‑to‑toe with the latest Dolby Vision implementations. HDR10+ Advanced builds on dynamic metadata HDR with more granular tone mapping, genre‑aware optimization and smarter motion handling, all of which are increasingly important at this scale, where bad processing is far more visible. Pair that with Samsung’s new Eclipsa Audio system—which focuses on more immersive, spatial sound—and the 130‑inch model is clearly being pitched as a one‑stop home theater centerpiece rather than a panel you’ll immediately need to augment with a separate high‑end sound system.​

There’s also a heavy AI story layered into this TV, in line with Samsung’s broader “AI companion” push across the 2026 lineup. The set comes with an upgraded Vision AI Companion that sits on top of the Tizen OS experience and turns the TV into a conversational hub for both content and utilities. In practical terms, that means you can call up proactive recommendations, ask natural‑language questions about shows or sports, and access a suite of AI modes and apps like AI Football Mode Pro, AI Sound Controller Pro, Live Translate and even generative wallpaper that can turn that vast 130‑inch canvas into custom art when you’re not watching anything. Samsung is also leaning on partnerships: Microsoft Copilot and Perplexity are accessible directly from the TV, putting general-purpose AI assistants on the biggest screen in the house.​

If you zoom out a bit, this 130‑inch screen sits at the top of a broader Micro RGB push for 2026. Samsung has already confirmed that Micro RGB models will come in more approachable sizes—ranging from 55 inches up to 115 inches—aimed at high‑end living rooms rather than just the ultra‑luxury niche. Those smaller models won’t have the sheer wow factor of a 130‑inch wall of pixels, but they will share the same core tech: sub‑100 μm RGB LEDs, AI‑driven processing and the same focus on wide color gamuts and brightness. Taken together, Samsung is trying to carve out a new premium tier that sits between conventional Mini LED and true Micro LED, with Micro RGB marketed as the sweet spot of performance, longevity and cost.​

For everyday buyers, the obvious question is how Micro RGB stacks up against OLED, which has been the reference point for picture quality over the last decade. Micro RGB still uses an LCD layer and a backlight, so it cannot fully match the per‑pixel black levels and off‑axis consistency of OLED or true Micro LED. However, the tech pushes back hard in the areas where OLED is weakest: brightness and long‑term durability. Because Micro RGB uses inorganic LEDs, it avoids the burn‑in concerns that still linger around OLED, and it can drive significantly higher peak and sustained brightness—an advantage for bright rooms, HDR movies and sports where specular highlights and large bright scenes can cause OLED sets to dial back their output. The promise is a TV that feels closer to OLED in contrast and color than a typical Mini LED, while still delivering the punchy brightness of an LED‑based system.​

Of course, none of this will come cheap. Samsung hasn’t gone into public pricing detail yet, but given where earlier Micro RGB and high‑end Micro LED products have landed, the 130‑inch R95H is almost certainly destined for luxury homes, design‑driven spaces and perhaps boutique commercial installs rather than ordinary apartments. This is the sort of display that ends up in penthouses, private screening rooms and flagship smart homes—the kind of places where the TV isn’t just another gadget but a core piece of the interior design brief. For everyone else, the real impact will likely be felt further down the range as Micro RGB trickles into more “normal” sizes and, eventually, more accessible price brackets over the next few years.​

Still, as a statement piece, Samsung’s 130‑inch Micro RGB TV does exactly what it needs to do at CES: it gives the company a visible, talkable example of what its next wave of display tech looks like. It showcases how far the Mini LED‑style architecture can be pushed with RGB backlights and heavy AI processing, and how TV makers increasingly see the television as a smart, AI‑driven companion rather than just a panel for streaming apps. And if nothing else, it’s a reminder that in 2026, the “big TV” arms race isn’t over; it has just moved into a new phase where the walls themselves are turning into screens—only now, they talk back.


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