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SamsungTech

The Samsung Movingstyle brings a 27-inch display you can roll, detach, and move freely

Samsung’s portable Movingstyle display delivers a 27-inch HDR touchscreen that can roll, detach, and operate wire-free for hours.

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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Nov 12, 2025, 12:40 PM EST
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Samsung Movingstyle portable display.
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Samsung quietly opened a new niche this summer: a TV that wants to be a tablet. Meet the Movingstyle — a 27-inch touchscreen that lives somewhere between a smart TV, a monitor, and a portable display you can actually carry with a handle. It’s also an exercise in compromises: portability for power, mobility for price. Here’s the long read on what it is, how it works, who it might suit — and where it falls short.

The Movingstyle is a 27-inch QHD (2,560 × 1,440) touchscreen smart display with a built-in battery, Samsung says will last up to three hours on a charge. You can slide the panel off a wheeled, rollable floor stand and carry it like a briefcase using an integrated handle; that same handle folds out into a kickstand for tabletop use. It’s priced at $1,199.99 in the U.S. and ships with Samsung TV Plus, Gaming Hub access and a set of ports that includes two USB-C and one HDMI.

Samsung has clearly tried to design something that “moves” — the floor stand has wheels and a height-adjustable arm so you can swivel the screen into portrait or landscape. The panel itself detaches with a sliding button on the back; it has a built-in handle (and that handle doubles as a kickstand) so you can carry it around. That’s clever engineering — and also what separates the Movingstyle from the average monitor.

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But “portable” here is relative. The display weighs almost 12 pounds (about 5.4kg) without the stand, so it’s easy enough to move from room to room, but not something you’ll want to sling around all day. Think: backyard movie night, a presentation in different rooms, or an artist’s easel replacement — not a commuter device.

The Movingstyle’s panel is QHD at 120 Hz, supports HDR10+, and Samsung advertises Dolby Atmos audio. It runs Tizen (Samsung’s smart TV OS), includes Samsung TV Plus (free live/linear channels) and Gaming Hub for cloud gaming services such as Xbox Cloud Gaming, GeForce Now and Amazon Luna — essentially letting you stream games without a console if you have decent Wi-Fi. You can control the screen by touch (it’s a touchscreen), with the included remote, or with Bixby/voice commands.

Samsung lists a 69Wh battery for the 27-inch model; that’s what lets Samsung claim ~3 hours of runtime. In practice, how long you get will vary considerably (streaming at high brightness and using wireless audio will chew more power than doing slide decks at lower brightness).

On the hardware side, you’ll find two USB-C ports and an HDMI on the back. The screen supports Wi-Fi streaming and Bluetooth audio pairing, so you can use wireless speakers or headphones. That makes it flexible: wired laptop to HDMI for a meeting, USB-C for a MacBook or Steam Deck, or straight streaming apps on the device itself.

Samsung isn’t inventing the idea of a mobile screen — LG’s StanbyME has chased a similar market for a couple of years — but the Movingstyle leans harder into TV features and cloud gaming. Where LG has sometimes pitched the StanbyME at families and casual use, Samsung is positioning this as an all-in-one for entertainment and light productivity: a TV that detaches. If you already own a smart TV or a separate monitor + streaming device, the question is whether Movingstyle’s mobility is worth the premium.

Samsung is also selling a 32-inch Movingstyle M7 Smart Monitor (4K) for $699.99, but that model is not detachable — its rollable stand keeps the display tied to the base, and it lacks the built-in battery. Practically, this gives buyers a choice: a fully portable (but pricier and heavier) 27-inch that you can take off the stand, or a room-mobile 32-inch that must remain plugged in.

Where the Movingstyle shines:

  • Casual entertainment in odd places — backyard, kitchen island, or a temporary second screen in a different room.
  • Pop-up presentations — presenting without running HDMI cables across a room, then detaching and carrying the screen to the next space.
  • Cloud-gaming sessions without a console — Gaming Hub makes this an interesting choice for those who want a big, movable display to stream games.

Where it’s limited:

  • Battery life — Samsung’s “up to three hours” is a headline figure; in heavy use (bright HDR video, cloud gaming, speakers), expect less. The 69Wh battery capacity explains why that runtime is limited.
  • Portability tradeoffs — almost 12 pounds without the stand isn’t trivial. It’s portable like a small suitcase, not like a tablet.
  • Price — at $1,199.99, you’re paying a premium for the combination of screen, battery and a unique stand. If you don’t need full detachability, the less expensive 32-inch M7 might be a better value.

Samsung’s Movingstyle is one of those products that is more interesting in concept than it may be in everyday life for most buyers. It’s a well-executed experiment: good screen specs, sensible software choices and a genuinely useful stand/handle idea. But the short battery life and the weight create real tradeoffs that limit the “move anywhere” promise.

If you constantly need a big, movable screen that occasionally needs to be unplugged — and you value built-in streaming, cloud gaming and touchscreen control — the Movingstyle is probably the most polished option on the market right now. If you mostly want a monitor or a TV and only occasionally want to reposition it within a room, there are cheaper, lighter or more power-efficient solutions.


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