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    HomeNewsHisense Unveils Industry-First RGBY MicroLED Display at CES 2026

    Hisense Unveils Industry-First RGBY MicroLED Display at CES 2026

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    Hisense has introduced the 163MX, the world’s first RGBY MicroLED display, at CES 2026 in Las Vegas. The 163-inch television adds a yellow sub-pixel to traditional RGB architecture, earning a CES 2026 Best of Innovation Award for its breakthrough four-primary color system. By filling the critical 500–600nm spectral gap, the display achieves up to 100% coverage of the BT.2020 color space, a new benchmark for self-emissive MicroLED technology.

    What Makes RGBY Different

    The 163MX’s four-primary RGBY (Red, Green, Blue, Yellow) architecture addresses a fundamental weakness in conventional RGB displays. Standard MicroLED panels struggle to reproduce accurate colors in the 500–600 nanometer wavelength range, where warm tones, skin tones, and natural materials often appear muted or compressed. Hisense’s solution adds a dedicated yellow sub-pixel to restore this missing spectrum, delivering what the company calls “creator-true color reproduction”.

    The display manages 33.17 million self-emissive sub-pixels using advanced color management that balances luminance and chromatic uniformity across the massive canvas. Early reports suggest this approach improves the BT.2020 color gamut coverage by 5% over previous RGB MicroLED systems, though Hisense claims the 163MX reaches the full 100% threshold.

    Why This Matters

    True MicroLED technology offers pixel-level control without organic materials, combining OLED’s perfect blacks with higher brightness and no burn-in risk. The RGBY innovation pushes color accuracy further by addressing mid-tone reproduction, an area where both OLED and traditional MicroLED fall short. For content creators and cinephiles, this means smoother gradients, richer warm colors, and more accurate HDR rendering.

    The 163MX is a technology showcase rather than a mass-market product, signaling Hisense’s long-term investment in multi-primary display systems. It builds on the 136MX MicroLED TV unveiled at CES 2025, demonstrating rapid iteration in ultra-large display innovation.

    Design and Specs

    Despite its 163-inch screen size, the 163MX features an ultra-slim 32mm profile and a precision zero-gap wall mount. The minimalist design allows the display to integrate into architectural spaces without overwhelming premium home theaters or commercial installations.

    Key specifications include:

    • Screen size: 163 inches diagonal
    • Color gamut: Up to 100% BT.2020
    • Sub-pixels: 33.17 million RGBY
    • Thickness: 32mm
    • Mount: Zero-gap wall bracket

    The display maintains wide viewing angles with minimal color shift or brightness drop, a challenge for early MicroLED prototypes.

    What’s Next

    Hisense has not announced pricing, availability, or production timelines for the 163MX. The display is being shown at CES 2026 (January 6–9) in the Las Vegas Convention Center, Central Hall Booth 17704. Like most award-winning CES prototypes, the 163MX likely serves as a research platform to test four-primary color systems before commercialization.

    The company continues to expand RGBY and multi-primary technology across its product lines, suggesting future consumer models may adopt scaled-down versions of the architecture. Hisense ranks No. 1 globally in the 100-inch and over TV segment as of Q3 2025, positioning it to bring ultra-large displays to broader markets.

    Comparison: RGBY vs. RGB MicroLED

    Feature RGBY MicroLED (163MX) RGB MicroLED (Standard)
    Sub-pixel structure Four-primary (RGBY) Three-primary (RGB)
    BT.2020 coverage Up to 100% ~90–95%
    Spectral gap (500–600nm) Addressed with yellow Weak/compressed
    Warm tone accuracy Enhanced Limited
    Commercial availability Prototype Limited (ultra-premium)

    Featured Snippet Boxes

    What is RGBY MicroLED technology?

    RGBY MicroLED adds a yellow sub-pixel to the traditional red, green, and blue structure, creating a four-primary color system. This fills the 500–600nm spectral gap where standard RGB displays produce weak or inaccurate colors, improving warm tones, skin tones, and overall color fidelity.

    How much does the Hisense 163MX cost?

    Hisense has not announced pricing for the 163MX. As a CES 2026 award-winning prototype, it’s designed to showcase future display technology rather than serve as an immediate consumer product. Production plans and retail availability remain unconfirmed.

    What is the BT.2020 color space?

    BT.2020 (Rec. 2020) is the ultra-high-definition television color standard covering a wider range of colors than older standards like BT.709. The 163MX’s 100% BT.2020 coverage means it can reproduce nearly all colors visible in HDR content, matching professional mastering displays.

    When will the 163MX be available to buy?

    No release date has been set. The 163MX is currently a technology demonstration at CES 2026, with Hisense using it to test four-primary MicroLED systems before potential commercialization. Future consumer products may incorporate scaled versions of RGBY architecture.

    Mohammad Kashif
    Mohammad Kashif
    Senior Technology Analyst and Writer at AdwaitX, specializing in the convergence of Mobile Silicon, Generative AI, and Consumer Hardware. Moving beyond spec sheets, his reviews rigorously test "real-world" metrics analyzing sustained battery efficiency, camera sensor behavior, and long-term software support lifecycles. Kashif’s data-driven approach helps enthusiasts and professionals distinguish between genuine innovation and marketing hype, ensuring they invest in devices that offer lasting value.

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