Samsung is moving Micro RGB out of the “only-for-palaces” category and toward living rooms that actually have walls and doorways. After debuting a show-stopping 115-inch MR95F last year, the company has announced a full family of Micro RGB models for 2026 — including the first 55- and 65-inch versions — and says it will show the new line around CES in January.
That matters because until now, Micro RGB felt like a halo technology: jaw-dropping if you could afford a dedicated media room, irrelevant if you live in an apartment. Samsung’s 2026 plan lists 55-, 65-, 75-, 85-, 98-, 100- and the existing 115-inch class MR95F as the product family it will take to market, a clear signal the company wants Micro RGB to be something people think about when they’re choosing a high-end set for an actual home.
Micro RGB isn’t a marketing buzzword so much as an engineering trade-off. Instead of using a few white or blue LEDs behind a color filter, these sets employ clusters of red, green and blue LEDs as the backlight — Samsung says its individual red, green and blue LEDs are smaller than 100 micrometres — letting the panel hit higher color volume and peak brightness while tightening local dimming control. In plain terms: better, brighter colors and less of the halo or “blooming” you see when bright objects sit on dark backgrounds — at least in theory.

The technical leap is meaningful but not unique. The past two years have seen a parade of vendors pushing RGB-capable LED arrays: Hisense showcased 116-inch RGB-miniLED hardware that argued for RGB’s color advantages, and LG has said it will ship Micro RGB models of its own. What’s new here is Samsung bringing those design choices down into the 55–75-inch sizes that most people actually buy. That changes how the technology looks on price lists, storefronts and showroom floors.
How much of a category shift this is will depend on three things almost no one can answer yet: price, real-world performance against the current best OLEDs, and availability. Samsung and others are promising CES reveals for more details; until we see SRPs and independent reviews, Micro RGB is a tempting promise rather than a consumer-safe recommendation. The company’s messaging so far leans hard on color volume and AI-driven picture processing, but showroom demos and spec sheets rarely survive the harsher light of hands-on testing.
There’s also a marketing wrinkle: companies aren’t consistent about what “mini” or “micro” actually means, and PR departments love a tidy label. That means some of the differences between a “Micro RGB” set and a “RGB mini-LED” set are semantic and product-line dependent. For buyers, the important question isn’t the label but whether the TV reduces blooming, raises usable HDR brightness, and reproduces saturated colors without pushing skin tones into alien territory. Independent testing will tell that story.
For downsized buyers — the people who want premium picture quality but don’t have or want a 100-inch portal — Samsung’s lineup is a potentially big deal. A 55- or 65-inch Micro RGB that actually beats existing OLEDs at brightness and holds its own on black-level control would be a tempting alternative for bright-room viewers and sports fans who want both punch and color accuracy. If the early models are priced and distributed sensibly, Micro RGB could follow OLED’s arc: start as an aspirational statement, then drift toward being a mainstream premium choice.
But vendor promises rarely map cleanly onto consumer reality. The ultra-large Micro RGB sets launched in 2025 carry ultra-premium price tags; shrinking the physical size doesn’t automatically mean affordable pricing. Component density, yield problems and the extra control electronics that make RGB backlights work tend to keep costs high. The first few waves of 55–75-inch Micro RGBs will probably be priced toward high-end buyers and early adopters rather than the mass market.
There’s also competition to consider. LG, Hisense, TCL and others are racing toward RGB-capable backlights, and those rival efforts could push prices down more quickly than any single company can do alone. That competition will be the practical test: if rival manufacturers can ship credible RGB sets at lower price points, Micro RGB won’t be a one-brand prestige play — it will be a broadly available premium class. If not, it risks staying aspirational.
What to watch at CES 2026 is straightforward. Look for concrete U.S. and regional pricing, precise model numbers (the retail SKUs often differ from show names), and — most important — independent hands-on reviews that test HDR peak brightness, local dimming finesse and color accuracy. Those metrics will tell you if Micro RGB is a real step forward or primarily a rearrangement of marketing. Samsung’s push to smaller sizes is the right strategic move; whether it becomes a practical choice for most people depends on what the company shows next month and what the reviewers find when those sets hit stores.
For now, Samsung’s announcement reads like a roadmap: take a technology that impressed at one extreme of the market, stretch the family down into sensible living-room sizes, and let competition and time do the rest. If history is any guide, the first generation will be expensive and rare; the second generation will chip away at cost and appeal. Between those two points sits an important question for buyers: are you chasing the absolute cutting edge, or waiting for the tech to land where performance, price and availability finally line up?
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