We’ve finally gotten our eyes on LG’s futuristic display, and now that we have, 8K OLED makes a whole lot more sense than it did when it was but a concept. In the video above, you can see the LG 88-inch 8K OLED for yourself, but unfortunately you’ll have to take our word for it when we say it is gorgeous, and it deserves a place among the TV Hall of Fame.

Creep right up to LG’s 88-inch 8K OLED and you’ll struggle to see the pixels.

While nobody really needs an 88-inch 8K OLED in their home, we imagine many folks will want one once they see it up close. Creep right up to the TV and you’ll struggle to see the pixels. That kind of pixel density and ultra-small pixel size generates an incredibly lifelike imagine, with depth that gives the TV an almost 3D effect.

It’s fair to ask what good an 8K TV is when 4K content is still hard to come by outside of select titles from streaming services like Netflix and Amazon. On the short term, most content will need to be upscaled to 8K for any 8K TV, but with Japan already broadcasting 8K, it’s only a matter of time before native 8K content will be available. For the immediate future, 8K is useful for extremely large displays, which have tons of retail applications, and could be seen replacing projectors and projector screens in small, high-end home theaters.

The big advantage to LG’s 88-inch 8K OLED TV is the OLED display technology itself, offered at such a large size. It’s more of everything we love about OLED: Perfect black levels, excellent contrast, knock-out HDR performance, and luscious color. If other 8K displays deliver and strong blow, the LG 8K OLED is a total knock-out.

We generally end up seeing more of everything we love about TV at CES — higher resolution, bigger screen sizes, better HDR, higher brightness, deeper blacks, and elevated, cutting-edge technologies. This year has been no different.

Rich Shibley/Digital Trends

Samsung has taken the wraps off its 146-inch MicroLED display, which it calls “The Wall,” and it is impressive in a way that is hard to communicate with words, though we’ve certainly tried.

This is just the beginning of the fanfare we will see in the coming hours and days. Here’s more of what you can expect to see in TV at CES 2018.

8K TVs are coming … for real this time

If 8K has you freaking out a little bit, don’t worry: Your brand-new 4K TV is not about to be rendered obsolete. At this point, 8K TVs are still very much a look-to-the-future technology, but manufacturers are eager to show they are moving past the prototype phase and into the production phase. We will see massive 8K TVs (read: bigger than 80 inches) of both the LED and OLED variety in heavily guarded areas of high-end electronics stores toward the end of the year. And if you’ve got a fat enough wallet, you could buy one and put it in your home.

We’ve seen 8K TVs in the past — all of them concept displays — but this year big brands like LG will be working hard to send home a message that 8K does make sense in larger screen sizes. We’re already convinced, but will you be?

Meanwhile, 4K TV is still the standard and what most of us will be buying. Here’s what we can expect in terms of real-world TV changes for the year.

1080p in the kitchen, 4K HDR everywhere else

Most major TV manufacturers make TVs above the 50-inch screen size exclusively with 4K panels already, but 2018 will see 1080p panels used only in the most bottom-of-the-barrel models. Sure, 4K resolution doesn’t do much for you below the 55-inch mark, but that doesn’t really matter anymore since 4K panels are the new standard and aren’t significantly more expensive to make than 1080p panels.

Premium HDR will define premium LED TVs

Now that 4K isn’t really considered a premium anymore, manufacturers will look to premium HDR performance along with peak brightness and black levels in order to make their LED TVs stand out. That’s pretty much all they’ve got to work with, and it’s even more important in 2018 because OLED TVs are getting cheaper and, as they do, the list of reasons to buy LED instead of OLED are rapidly dwindling.

TV makers just need to suck it up and deploy full-array local dimming.

How manufacturers will pull this off is the real trick. LCD displays that rely on LED backlights suffer from poor viewing angles, halos around bright objects on black backgrounds, and blacks that look a little more like gray than black. The only way to make improvements is to make the LCD panels better and the LED backlights better. Can this be done?

The backlight solution is pretty easy: TV makers just need to suck it up and deploy full-array local dimming (FALD) backlight systems in more of their TVs while keeping the prices in check. We may have to deal with slightly thicker TVs as a trade-off, but the performance would be better for a wider array of models. The LCD panel improvements, though? That’s a much harder nut to crack.

Samsung won’t make an OLED TV, but may have something else up its sleeve

Given the rivalry between the two South Korean titans of tech, there is no way in hell Samsung is going to give in and make an OLED TV. To do so, it would not only have to concede its long-held belief that OLED is an inferior long-term technology, it would also have to either build a big OLED panel production facility for its TVs, or tuck its tail between its legs and buy OLED panels from LG, just like Sony — LG’s only OLED competition — does. None of that is happening, trust me.

I do, however, think it is possible Samsung could use a new technology called microLED, which could end up being the company’s answer to OLED.

Rich Shibley/Digital Trends

For those who may have missed it, Samsung introduced its take on microLED within the context of a massive, modular cinema display earlier this year. If history is any indicator, Samsung would want to trickle that commercial tech down to the consumer level. Given that tendency as a clue, it is possible we could see a prototype display of microLED in a consumer-level TV size, and if we do, it would look very strong against OLED — deep blacks, brilliant color, and far superior brightness, all with no burn-in potential.

We’re not the only ones who think this may happen. There’s a breadcrumb trail nearly a mile long being dropped by various reviewers and tech publications. David Katzmaier at CNET is pretty convinced we’ll see microLED in his own “what to expect” piece, and ZDNET Korea broke news that several other publications are picking up.

Yet another clue is the fact that other major manufacturers are looking to microLED as an alternative to OLED dispalys. Apple purchased LuxVue, a microLED company, and rumors are already swirling that the Cupertino, California-based company could skip OLED and go directly to microLED. What’s good enough for mobile displays has usually been good enough for computer displays and TVs — it’s just a matter of scaling them up or, in Samsung’s case, scaling it down.

Voice control replaces the remote control

You can already use proprietary voice control on LG TVs and Samsung TVs, and Sony lets you use Google Assistant to some degree, but voice control hasn’t really hit its stride with TV … yet.

The new year will see all kinds of new voice control tricks. Google Assistant will find its way into more televisions, and it will do more once there. Amazon’s Alexa won’t get left out in the cold, don’t worry. We might even see both in the same TV models.

Soon we’ll be able to call up exactly what we want to watch just by asking for it. We’ll be able to play our content to multiple TVs in the home with the utterance of a few words, and we’ll be able to set alarms, control our smart homes, and more … with words. The TV was always going to become the real hub of the smart home of the future; now we’re going to see it in action.

TCL will bring the heat and we will be watching

China-based electronics outfit TCL came out of nowhere this year and blew me away with its 55-inch P-Series 4K HDR Roku TV. I was so impressed, it listed it as one of the best TVs you could buy this year.

In 2018, I expect TCL to double or triple down on that success. It got the attention it needed to get mentioned in the same breath as Samsung and LG. Now it’s going to run with that notoriety and do something big with it at the show. When it does, I’ll be there to show it to you.

HDMI 2.1 will hide behind the scenes

HDMI 2.1 just came out and it is kind of a big deal — big enough that I wrote a piece explaining everything you need to know. Will we see HDMI 2.1 at the show? Not in the way you might think. I doubt that many, if any, TV manufacturers have had enough time to implement the new standard into their production lines yet, so it seems unlikely we’d see any TVs capable of 4K at 120Hz or 8K at 60Hz. Still, crazier things have happened.

What I do expect to learn about HDMI 2.1 is in what order we may start to see its potential benefits. My gut says we’ll start with dynamic HDR, move to 8K, and then get to the higher framerates gamers (and Peter Jackson) crave.

Editor’s note: At the time of publishing this article, we have been briefed by a few major TV manufacturers and are aware of what they’ll be bringing to the big show. However, we can’t disclose any details. With that said, most of this article was written before those briefings and, frankly, these predictions are fairly easy to come to with prior CES experience, a little deep technology knowledge (techknowledgy?), and a sense for stitching clues together.

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