LG’s 9mm W6 Wallpaper TV Brings 4x Brighter OLED to CES 2026

LG’s 9mm W6 Wallpaper TV Brings 4x Brighter OLED to CES 2026

> At a Glance

> – LG unveils the W6 Wallpaper TV at CES 2026, measuring just 9 mm thick

> – New OLED panel is 3.9× brighter and uses Brightness Booster Ultra with Hyper Radiant Color Technology

> – Reflection-free coating claims lowest reflectance of any LG TV for better lit-room viewing

> – Why it matters: LG targets Samsung’s picture-quality crown with a glare-free, ultra-thin 4K/165 Hz gaming powerhouse

LG has revived its Wallpaper line at CES 2026, introducing the W6-a 77- or 83-inch 4K OLED that hangs flush like art yet packs serious performance upgrades.

wallpaper

Breakthrough Panel Tech

The set’s new OLED stack delivers 3.9× the brightness of conventional panels while a glare-killing film cuts reflections to record-low levels for LG. A brief demo on the show floor showed black levels staying deep even with overhead lights.

Key image features:

  • Brightness Booster Ultra engine
  • Hyper Radiant Color Technology for wider gamut
  • Reflection-free surface
  • 4K 165 Hz with 0.1 ms response
  • G-Sync & AMD FreeSync Premium certified

Wireless Box Returns

All inputs live in a separate Zero Connect box that can sit up to 30 ft away; the panel itself needs only a single power cord. The box supplies four HDMI 2.1 ports plus LG’s webOS smart platform and new AI-generated wallpaper modes.

Pricing & Availability

LG has not announced price or ship date for either screen size.

Key Takeaways

  • LG’s thinnest-ever OLED revives the Wallpaper form factor after a four-year hiatus
  • 3.9× brightness gain and anti-glare coating challenge Samsung’s flagship S95F
  • Wireless box keeps cables away while full gaming suite targets high-frame-rate consoles and PCs

Expect more details once LG sets retail timelines later this year.

Author

  • My name is Jonathan P. Miller, and I cover sports and athletics in Los Angeles.

    Jonathan P. Miller is a Senior Correspondent for News of Los Angeles, covering transportation, housing, and the systems that shape how Angelenos live and commute. A former urban planner, he’s known for clear, data-driven reporting that explains complex infrastructure and development decisions.

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