CES 2026 is arriving soon, and that means the yearly TV updates are upon us. We’re expected to see some major display technology upgrades as LG announced it will unveil a new Micro RGB-based TV at CES 2026, dubbed “Micro RGB evo” (model name MRGB95), which comes in 100-inch, 86-inch, and 75-inch sizes.
LG Micro RGB evo TV

Specifically, the new panel technology relies on individually controlled 1,000-plus-zone RGB LED backlighting on top of the RGB pixel layer to further boost color volume, on top of offering excellent contrast characteristics. This effectively supersedes existing Mini-LED technology that use zoned white backlighting for the same purpose. The upscaling hardware is now updated to LG’s in-house Alpha 11 AI Processor Gen 3 with dual simultaneous upscaling processes to improve image clarity while maintaining balanced color and detail.
All told, this new panel technology allows the Micro RGB evo to achieve full-spectrum color reproduction, certified by Intertek for 100% color gamut coverage across BT.2020, DCI-P3 and Adobe RGB standards. In particular, the BT.2020 standard feature super wide gamut covering a greater area of the CIE 1931 chromaticity chart over other standards, making it the most difficult color space to achieve full coverage up until this point, and was never achieved in commercial hardware until now.
Software-wise, nothing too surprising (barring the uninvited presence of Microsoft Copilot): the Micro RGB evo runs on the webOS platform and includes several personalization features such as Voice ID, AI Picture Wizard, AI Sound Wizard and a customized home screen. It shouldn’t surprise you to know that’s not the end of it as far as AI mentions are concerned, with things like AI Concierge, AI Chatbot and AI Search all integrated into the TV’s operating system.
The hardware itself will be shown on the CES show floor come this January 6-9 over at Las Vegas, and you can find LG’s booth (#15004, Las Vegas Convention Center) to see it up close.
Pokdepinion: It shouldn’t take long before this gets trickled down to monitor displays – consider this a ‘holy grail’ of display color technology.
