Hisense 116UX // Hisense Newsroom
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RGB mini LED: technology that makes OLED look old

Luca Fontana
20.1.2025
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

At CES 2025, Hisense surprised everyone with RGB mini LED. Never before has an LCD TV been so bright, so colour-accurate – and so much of an attack on OLED.

I’d like to say that I’ll believe it when I see it, but I’m afraid that with so much peak brightness I’d risk burning my eyes out…

What is RGB mini LED?

Alright, one thing at a time. What is RGB mini LED anyway, and how does it differ from a conventional mini LED TV like Sony’s Bravia 9?

In short, RGB mini LED uses red, green and blue LEDs instead of white LEDs for backlighting. It makes colours appear stronger, more accurate and conjures an overall brighter image. Simply put, colours look more natural and the TV can display more hues.

Why is this important? Well, RGB LEDs enable purer colours, more precise gradations and 97 per cent coverage of the BT.2020 colour space. For anyone unfamiliar with the term, the BT.2020 colour space is a standard that can display many more colours than the DCI-P3 space previously used for HDR content. The greater the colour space coverage, the more lifelike and intense colours appear.

However, even the latest generation of OLEDs pale in comparison to the 10,000 nit RGB mini LEDs that have been announced. To explain exactly how this works, we need to delve a little deeper into the matter.

The difference to conventional mini LEDs

With conventional mini LEDs, the backlight consists of thousands of tiny white LEDs that can be dimmed in zones to increase contrast. This is known as local dimming.

Advantage number one

Hisense wants to enable even finer control of the backlight with RGB mini LEDs. Instead of thousands of dimming zones, as is usual with conventional mini LEDs, even smaller and more precise dimming zones could be realised with RGB LEDs. This would both improve contrast as well as reduce blooming – the unwanted glow of light areas next to dark areas.

Advantage number two

White mini LEDs aren’t actually white, but based on blue LEDs coated with a thick layer of phosphor to create a white background light. This can lead to colour distortions, especially with bright reds or rich shades of green.

RGB mini LEDs avoid this problem by using separate red, green and blue LEDs. If they all shine at the same time, the result is a much brighter and cleaner white than what you’d get with a thick phosphor layer.

However, these LEDs should also work independently of each other, and their intensity can be individually adjusted. This both extends the coverage of the aforementioned BT-2020 colour space and increases colour purity as well as accuracy. All with near-perfect blacks, thanks to the thousands of dimming zones. Another thing I’ll only believe when I see it. But according to insiders, even high-end OLEDs should look old against the overall package of the new RGB mini LED.

To categorise

Satisfactory results of almost 90 per cent BT.2020 coverage have so far only been achieved by Samsung OLED televisions using a Quantum Dot layer. So what Hisense is announcing with its 97 per cent is a big deal.

Is the hype justified?

Why all this euphoria?

And the competition?

While TCL and Samsung also presented their own RGB mini LEDs, only the Hisense 116UX seems to be actually close to launch. As a result, Hisense decided to give the technology its own name: TriChromaLED.

Regarding price, Hisense is still staying silent. Going by display size and technology, I’d estimate around 50,000 francs.

What does this mean for the future?

Looks like we’re in for a treat. I hope it doesn’t actually burn my eyes out during the first test – no, seriously.

Header image: Hisense 116UX // Hisense Newsroom

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I write about technology as if it were cinema, and about films as if they were real life. Between bits and blockbusters, I’m after stories that move people, not just generate clicks. And yes – sometimes I listen to film scores louder than I probably should.


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