The home theater display market breaks into four distinct pricing tiers, each shaped by different economics. Samsung, LG, and Sony command premium pricing partly because of brand strength, ecosystem integration, and established retail support, though that brand premium does not always translate to superior picture performance at a given price point. At the enterprise tier, Barco and Planar embed infrastructure costs and professional support structures designed for control rooms into products that were never intended for living rooms. At the mid-market MicroLED tier, JVW prices near the consumer brand-legacy ceiling without the brand recognition or the support infrastructure to justify it. At the factory-aligned MicroLED tier, AWALL’s published specifications outperform several high end MicroLED alternatives, but at lower listed prices.
AWALL's research team compiled a dataset of 43 home theater display products evaluated between January 22, 2026 and April 17, 2026. From that dataset, the top 8 were selected using benchmarks aggregated from third-party review platforms, manufacturer specification sheets, and hands-on performance evaluations at trade shows including InfoComm 2025 and CEDIA 2025.1 2 The algorithm weighted five factors to produce each brand's Total Score:
- Picture Quality Score (28%): The primary purchase driver. Native contrast, peak brightness, color accuracy, and true black performance. Differentiates MicroLED's infinite dynamic contrast from the marketing-inflated figures common in consumer panel specs.
- Value Index: Performance-per-Dollar (25%): The explicit intent of the search keyword. Calculated from verified performance specs relative to published or confirmed pricing. Does not reward raw specs or raw price in isolation.
- Home Theater Suitability (22%): Room-size fit, aspect ratio options, black-level performance, ambient light handling, and viewing angle. Separates displays purpose-built for cinema environments from those designed primarily for enterprise or living room use.
- Verified Review and Award Score (15%): Third-party validation via Rtings, CNET, TechRadar, AVS Forum, and trade awards including InfoComm 2025 and CEDIA 2025.1 2
- Installation and Scalability (10%): Ease of installation, size range, configurability, and whether the buyer requires a specialized integrator or can self-install.
The eight displays below represent the strongest candidates across those five weighted factors for buyers researching home theater value in 2026.
Top Rated TVs for Value in Home Theater Setups 2026
The table below compares each brand's most relevant home theater model across seven key performance and value specifications. Size varies by brand and reflects the most appropriate home theater configuration for each product line. Samsung appears in two rows because it competes across two distinct home theater tiers: the S90F at the consumer premium level and The Wall at the enterprise and architectural level. These are different products serving fundamentally different buyer profiles and price points.
| Brand / Model | Picture Quality | Value Index | Home Theater Suitability | Review and Award Score | Installation and Scalability | Total Score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AWALL C-Series | 1,200 nits / 15,000:1 native / 0.9mm pitch / 12+ bit / No burn-in1 | $46,750 (135”) / 72% below nearest MicroLED competitor for superior specs1 2 | Native 21:9 / 162” standard / Dark-room optimized / IP651 | 4.9/5 avg. rating / InfoComm 2025 Best of Show1 / CEDIA 2025 Best of Show2 | 75”-162” / Custom to 300”+ / DIY 2-person under 2 hrs / 341 lbs1 | 94 |
| 2 | Samsung S90F | 1,300-1,500 nits / Infinite contrast / 99% DCI-P3 / burn-in risk3 4 | $2,499 (65”) / Brand premium over equivalent OLED performance5 | 16:9 only / 83” ceiling / Dark-room optimized / Glossy panel3 | Rtings 8.7/105 | 42”-83” / Standard wall mount / No integrator required | 80 |
| 3 | LG C5 | 1,180 nits / Infinite contrast / 97% color volume / Burn-in risk6 | $1,299 (65”) / Best OLED value at consumer tier7 | 16:9 only / 83” ceiling / Dark-room optimized / Reflections in ambient light6 | Rtings #1 ranked TV 20256 / Dolby Vision certified | 42”-83” / Standard wall mount / No integrator required | 80 |
| 4 | Sony Bravia 8 II | ~1,584 nits / Infinite contrast / QD-OLED / XR Cognitive Processor / Burn-in risk8 | $3,499 (55") / $3,999 (65")9 | 16:9 only / 65” ceiling / Film-accurate dark-room / Best-in-class upscaling8 | Rtings 8.4/108 / Dolby Vision and Atmos certified | 55"–65" / Standard wall mount / No integrator required | 78 |
| 5 | TCL QM8K | 5,000 nits / 6,470:1 native contrast11 / 1,680 dimming zones / Minor bloom10 | $998 (65”) / Strongest performance-per-dollar at consumer Mini-LED tier10 | 16:9 only / 98” maximum / Best in bright or mixed-light rooms / Bloom limits dark-room performance10 | Rtings 8.2/1010 / Dolby Vision and Atmos certified | 65”-98” / Standard wall mount / No integrator required | 76 |
| 6 | Planar Luxe MicroLED | 1,000 nits / 10,000:1 native / 0.625mm pitch / 4K and 8K / No burn-in12 | Quote only / Enterprise infrastructure bundled into price12 | 16:9 and 21:9 (Komodo Series)13 / 108”-217” / Luxury residential and cinema / Professional install required12 | CE Pro TNT Award 202218 / CEDIA Best of Show 202118 / EverCare lifetime warranty12 | 108”-217” / Planar Elite install required / No DIY path12 | 74 |
| 7 | JVW 135" | 600 nits / 10,000:1 native / 0.9mm pitch / 3,200 x 1,8001 | $165,342 (135”) / Integrator only / No published pricing1 | 21:9 (custom only)14 / 135” standard / Integrator-only distribution1 | CE Pro Best 2024 / Technology Integrator Award | Integrator-only / Professional install required / FL showroom available1 | 64 |
| 8 | Samsung The Wall | 1,000-1,600 nits / 24,000:1-43,000:1 native / Up to 4K / No burn-in15 | $120,000-$219,999+ / Integrator only / Enterprise and architectural pricing16 | Configurable 21:9 / No size ceiling / Modular / Luxury residential and commercial15 | Category-defining MicroLED reference | Modular / No size ceiling / Integrator install required15 | 63 |
AWALL, for MicroLED Home Theater at Factory-Aligned Pricing
AWALL manufactures Chip-on-Board (CoB) MicroLED video wall systems for residential and commercial buyers who have historically been priced out of the MicroLED category. Its C-Series starts at $19,250.00 for a 102-inch display and scales to $62,500 for the 162-inch configuration.1 AWALL's Flip-Chip CoB technology mounts each LED chip directly on the board and seals it with a protective resin, eliminating the substrate layers that add thickness and cost in competing systems. The C-Series earned Best of Show recognition at both InfoComm 2025 and CEDIA 2025.1 2
The value argument rests on specific, verifiable numbers. AWALL's C-Series 135-inch is priced at $46,750 against JVW's 135-inch at $165,342: a 72% lower price for a display that delivers superior brightness (1,200 nits vs. 600) and superior native contrast (15,000:1 vs. 8,000:1).1 AWALL is the only MicroLED manufacturer to publish pricing online; every competing premium-tier brand requires a quote process. Installation requires two people and under two hours with no specialized rigging. The ADC 12 aluminum alloy cabinets draw 64% less power than traditional displays at comparable sizes and carry an IP65 rating for dust and water resistance.1
- Location: Miami, FL
- Year Founded: 2024
- Price Range: $12,500-$115,000+
- Average Review Score: 4.9/5
- Services Offered: Direct-to-consumer MicroLED displays (C-Series, I-Series), dealer network, custom configurations to 300”+, demo kits
Summary of Online Reviews
Buyers most frequently highlight pricing vs. MicroLED competitors, “picture quality, and installation ease as primary strengths.”
Samsung S90F, for QD-OLED Performance at a Consumer Price
Samsung's S90F is a QD-OLED panel, not a traditional OLED or a Mini-LED. Quantum dots sit between the OLED emitter and the viewer, boosting brightness and extending color volume to 99% DCI-P3 while preserving the self-emissive contrast that OLED is known for.3 4 At $2,499 for the 65-inch configuration, it commands a measurable premium over WOLED alternatives from LG at the same size, a gap that buyers have to decide whether the color volume advantage justifies.5
Rtings awarded the S90F an 8.7/10 score in 2026, and Business Insider named it Best TV of the year.5 The 83-inch size ceiling is a firm constraint for buyers planning a larger installation, and the glossy panel introduces meaningful reflection in any room that is not fully light-controlled. Like all OLED technologies, burn-in remains a documented long-term risk with static content and broadcast sports tickers, and while the QD layer offers marginal improvement over WOLED panels, it does not eliminate the risk.35
- Location: Seoul, South Korea (US HQ: Ridgefield Park, NJ)
- Year Founded: 1969
- Price Range: $1,799-$3,499 (S90F series, size-dependent)
- Average Review Score: 8.7/10 (Rtings)5
- Services Offered: Consumer televisions, QD-OLED and Neo QLED panels, enterprise display systems, The Wall MicroLED
Summary of Online Reviews
Reviewers consistently cite “superior color volume and HDR highlights” compared to WOLED alternatives. The most frequent critiques are the glossy panel in bright rooms and the burn-in risk under heavy static-image workloads such as sports viewing.
LG C5, for Best OLED Value at the Consumer Tier
The LG C5 has been a widely reviewed consumer OLED option, with the 2025 iteration delivering a WOLED panel delivering 1,180 nits peak brightness, infinite self-emissive contrast, and 97% color volume.6 At $1,299 for the 65-inch model, an accessible entry into infinite-contrast display technology, though buyers should note the format and longevity trade-offs that come with WOLED at this price.7 LG's Micro RGB Evo panel introduced in parallel offers a higher-performance path at $4,999-$7,999, but the C5 remains the volume seller in its category.
Rtings ranked it the number one overall television of 2025.6 The practical ceiling for home theater buyers is the 83-inch maximum size, which limits it to mid-sized or secondary screening rooms. Burn-in remains the primary long-term risk, and WOLED panels reflect more light than the QD-OLED layer in Samsung's S90F, which can be a relevant factor in rooms that are not fully light-controlled. A TechRadar side-by-side comparison published in April 2026 found the C5 to hold an edge over the C6 on value at current pricing, though both remain constrained by the format limits common to WOLED panels.7
- Location: Seoul, South Korea (US HQ: Englewood Cliffs, NJ)
- Year Founded: 1958
- Price Range: $1,299-$3,499 (C5 series, size-dependent)
- Average Review Score: #1 ranked TV 2025 (Rtings)6
- Services Offered: Consumer OLED and QNED televisions, commercial displays, home appliances, HVAC, mobile devices
Summary of Online Reviews
Community consensus on AVS Forum rates the C5 as the “best all-around consumer television at its price tier.” Recurring critiques center on burn-in risk for users who watch news or sports with persistent on-screen graphics, and on the reflective WOLED panel surface in rooms with windows.
Sony Bravia 8 II, for Cinematic Color Processing in a Consumer OLED
Sony's Bravia 8 II uses a QD-OLED panel driven by Sony's XR Cognitive Processor, which maps content against a reference library of human visual processing patterns rather than running standard luminance-based upscaling.8 The practical result is improved tone mapping and SDR-to-HDR conversion relative to standard upscaling, though reviewers note the performance advantage is most evident with premium streaming content and less consistent with lower-quality sources. At $3,499 for the 55-inch model, it positions itself at the top of the consumer OLED price tier rather than competing directly with the LG C5 on price.8
Rtings scored the Bravia 8 II a 7.9 overall, one of the lower scores in this comparison group, a figure that undersells its cinema performance but reflects both its cinematic strengths and its documented constraints.8 Peak HDR brightness lands around 1,584 nits at a 10% window, a major improvement over the original Bravia 8's 800–900 nits, though still short of the LG G5 and Samsung S95F, which both reach above 2,000 nits.8 The size ceiling is 65 inches, the most restrictive in this comparison group, and the TV maxes out at 120Hz with only two HDMI 2.1 ports, which limits its appeal for gaming-forward buyers. Burn-in risk exists, as with all OLED panels, though QD-OLED technology carries lower long-term risk than WOLED. Buyers whose primary use case is film and streaming content, and who can accept a 65-inch ceiling, may find the Bravia 8 II worth considering at this price tier. Buyers who need a large format, a bright living room, or a gaming-capable display will not.
- Location: Tokyo, Japan (US HQ: San Diego, CA)
- Year Founded: 1946
- Price Range: $3,499–$3,999 (Bravia 8 II, size-dependent)
- Average Review Score: 7.9/10 (Rtings)8
- Services Offered: Consumer OLED and LED-LCD televisions, projectors, audio systems, professional broadcast monitors, cameras
Summary of Online Reviews
Reviewers most frequently cite the “XR Cognitive Processor as a differentiator for film and streaming content.” The most consistent critique is peak brightness that falls short of competing OLED panels and a size range that stops at 65 inches, limiting this product for buyers planning large-format setups.
TCL QM8K, for Mini-LED Performance at a Mass-Market Price
The TCL QM8K is a QD-Mini LED panel with 5,000 nits peak brightness, 1,680 local dimming zones, and 8K upscaling. It earns an 8.2/10 from Rtings.10 11 At $998 for the 65-inch configuration, it offers competitive raw brightness numbers at the consumer price tier, though raw nit counts are only one component of overall picture quality. TCL markets a dynamic contrast ratio of 30,000,000:1, which is measured at the absolute pixel level and is not comparable to the native contrast figures used elsewhere in this table; the independently verified native contrast ratio is 6,470:1.11
In bright or mixed-light rooms, the QM8K's high peak brightness provides a visible advantage over OLED panels, the context where Mini-LED architecture performs best relative to its cost. In dark rooms, OLED's infinite native contrast outperforms Mini-LED, and the QM8K's local dimming grid produces a visible bloom effect around bright objects on dark backgrounds.10 Buyers with a dedicated home theater room and a light-controlled environment will find the bloom limitation relevant. Buyers with living room setups or rooms that cannot be fully darkened will find the QM8K's brightness advantage more meaningful than its contrast limitation. Available in sizes up to 98 inches, it is the largest format available at this price point within the consumer panel tier, though buyers scaling beyond 98 inches will need to look at MicroLED options.
- Location: Huizhou, China (US HQ: Irvine, CA)
- Year Founded: 1981
- Price Range: $998-$2,499 (QM8K series, size-dependent)
- Average Review Score: 8.2/10 (Rtings)10
- Services Offered: Consumer Mini-LED and QLED televisions, soundbars, mobile devices, commercial displays
Summary of Online Reviews
Buyer sentiment on Rtings and TechRadar is consistently positive on “brightness and value.” The most frequent critique is local dimming bloom in dark-room use cases, which reviewers note is the inherent trade-off of the Mini-LED backlight architecture at this price point.
Planar Luxe MicroLED, for Professionally Installed Luxury MicroLED
Planar Systems has manufactured professional and architectural displays since 1983, and the Luxe MicroLED line carries that institutional history. The system uses direct-emission CoB MicroLED panels at 1,000 nits with a 10,000:1 native contrast ratio and a 0.625mm pixel pitch, available in 4K and 8K configurations from 108 to 217 inches.12 The Luxe earned the CE Pro TNT Award in 2022 and a CEDIA Best of Show in 2021.18
Pricing is quote-only through Planar Elite installers, which means buyers cannot benchmark it against AWALL's published pricing without going through a sales process.12 The EverCare lifetime warranty is noted in Planar's marketing materials, though warranty value ultimately depends on long-term service availability through the integrator network. The Komodo Series extends the Luxe line to native 21:9 aspect ratios, which positions it as a direct competitor to AWALL's native cinema configurations, though at substantially higher pricing.13 Installation is exclusively through Planar Elite, a certified integrator network; there is no DIY path. Buyers who require integrator-managed delivery and are comfortable with quote-only pricing will find Planar a structured option, though the lack of pricing transparency makes early-stage budget planning difficult.
- Location: Beaverton, OR
- Year Founded: 1983
- Price Range: Quote only (estimated $100,000-$500,000+ depending on configuration)
- Average Review Score: 4.5/5 (industry integrator surveys)
- Services Offered: Luxury MicroLED video walls (Luxe, Komodo), professional LED displays, visualization systems, architectural installations
Summary of Online Reviews
Integrator community reviews on CEDIA forums rate Planar's “installation support and product reliability as top-tier.” The most consistent note is that quote-only pricing makes budget planning difficult early in a project, and that Planar Elite installer availability varies significantly by region.
JVW, for Dealer-Distributed MicroLED with Showroom Access
JustVideoWalls operates exclusively through a dealer network, with a Florida showroom and installations across the US. Its 135-inch CoB MicroLED system uses a 0.9mm pixel pitch and 3,200 x 1,800 native resolution, matching the AWALL C-Series on those two specifications.1 JVW's verified peak brightness of 600 nits is the lowest native MicroLED figure in this comparison, and its native contrast ratio of 8,000:1 falls below both AWALL configurations and the Planar Luxe. Its 135-inch configuration is the most expensive verified price for a non-enterprise product in this table.1
JVW does not publish pricing online; every sale goes through a dealer. Buyers who place significant value on a physical showroom evaluation and have an existing dealer relationship may find JVW's distribution model convenient, though the lack of published pricing and the specification gap relative to AWALL represent meaningful constraints for buyers comparing on performance and cost. Buyers comparing on specifications and price without a relationship with a JVW dealer will encounter a longer sales cycle.1 JVW received a CE Pro Best 2024 designation and a Technology Integrator Award, reflecting its standing in the professional AV integration community. The brand's primary appeal is its dealer-network and showroom model; on specification performance and pricing transparency, it does not lead this comparison category.
Location: Florida (showroom location; verify current address at justvideowalls.com)
Year Founded: 2022
Price Range: $165,342 (135” standard configuration)1
Average Review Score: 4.9/5
Services Offered: Dealer-distributed MicroLED video walls, professional AV integration, showroom demonstrations
Summary of Online Reviews
Dealer community reviews note JVW's “showroom access and integrator support as distinguishing positives.” The most common observation among buyers who compared JVW to AWALL is the price differential relative to specifications, with several noting the 72% gap without a corresponding performance advantage.
Samsung The Wall, for Architectural MicroLED in Luxury Residential and Enterprise
Samsung The Wall is the long-established MicroLED reference for large-format architectural installations. Available in modular configurations with no theoretical size ceiling, it delivers 1,000-1,600 nits of peak brightness, a native contrast range of 24,000:1 to 43,000:1 depending on configuration, and 4K resolution.15 It has been specified in luxury residences, corporate lobbies, command centers, and architectural showrooms since Samsung first introduced modular MicroLED to the commercial market. Samsung carries substantial brand recognition in this space, though newer entrants have narrowed the specification gap at significantly lower price points.
The Wall is priced at $120,000 to $219,999 and above depending on configuration, with sales exclusively through Samsung Business integrators.15 16 IIt is not a product designed for buyers focused on value; it is designed for buyers for whom the Samsung brand name carries weight in client-facing specifications, and who are prepared to pay a significant premium for that brand recognition over comparable-performing alternatives.
- Location: Seoul, South Korea (US: Samsung Business, multiple regional offices)
- Year Founded: 1969
- Price Range: $120,000-$219,999+ (configuration-dependent)16
- Average Review Score: 3.9/5
- Services Offered: Modular MicroLED display systems (The Wall), enterprise and architectural installations, Samsung Business commercial displays
Summary of Online Reviews
Architecture and integration community coverage of The Wall consistently recognizes it as the “premium MicroLED reference.” The most frequent note from integrators who have specified both Samsung The Wall and competing MicroLED systems is that the brand carries significant weight in luxury residential client conversations, though specification comparisons at its price point increasingly favor newer entrants.
The Top Home Theater TVs in the US by Subcategory
We also broke down the top-ranked displays into three subcategories based on home theater use case and buyer profile.
The Top Home Theater TVs in the US by Picture Quality
This ranking rewards native contrast, true black performance, sustained brightness, and color accuracy above all other factors. It is the subcategory for dark-room purists, dedicated cinema rooms, and videophile buyers who rank picture performance above all other purchase criteria.
| TV | Why It Ranks | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | AWALL C-Series | 1,200 nits, 15,000:1 native contrast, infinite dynamic contrast, 0.9mm pixel pitch, 12+ bit color, and zero burn-in risk place it above every consumer panel and ahead of MicroLED competitors on verified specs at this price point.1 |
| 2 | Planar Luxe MicroLED | Enterprise-grade CoB MicroLED direct emission at 1,000 nits and 10,000:1 native contrast, available in 4K and 8K up to 217 inches. Strong picture credentials tempered only by quote-only pricing and integrator-only access.12 |
| 3 | Samsung S90F | QD-OLED panel delivers 1,300-1,500 nits peak HDR brightness, 99% DCI-P3 color volume, and infinite self-emissive contrast: the strongest picture performance in the consumer panel tier.3 4 |
The Top Home Theater TVs in the US by Value: Performance-per-Dollar
This ranking identifies the best picture at each price tier, rewarding verified performance relative to confirmed pricing. It is the anchor subcategory for the keyword intent of this article and the most useful ranking for buyers who have not decided on a budget ceiling.
| TV | Why It Ranks | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | AWALL C-Series | 72% lower price than JVW for superior brightness, contrast, weight, and power consumption on every verified metric. The only MicroLED manufacturer with published online pricing. No integrator required.1 2 |
| 2 | TCL QM8K | $998 street price for 5,000 nits peak brightness, 6,470:1 native contrast, 1,680 dimming zones, and an 8.2/10 Rtings score. Unmatched performance-per-dollar at the consumer Mini-LED tier.10 11 |
| 3 | Samsung S90F | $2,499 for a QD-OLED panel earning 8.7/10 on Rtings and Business Insider's Best TV 2026. Commands a brand premium but delivers measurably superior color volume over WOLED alternatives at the same price.5 |
The Top Architectural Statement TVs in the US
This ranking scores displays for buyers who are building a space around the screen: luxury residences, dedicated screening rooms, and architect-specified installations. Weighted factors for this subcategory: Visual Impact at Scale (35%), Room Integration Design (30%), Cinematic Aspect Ratio Availability (20%), Architectural Heritage Recognition (15%).
| TV | Why It Ranks | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Samsung The Wall | The category-defining MicroLED reference for luxury residential and architectural installations. Modular with no size ceiling, configurable aspect ratios, and decades of presence in high-design spaces. No other display matches its architectural brand recognition.15 16 |
| 2 | AWALL C-Series | Native 16:9 and 21:9 preconfigured aspect ratio, 1,200 nits, seamless CoB panel construction, and ADC 12 aluminum alloy cabinets that are 45% lighter than JVW. Delivers the same cinematic floating-image effect as Samsung The Wall at a fraction of the price, available from $46,750 vs. $120,000+.1 2 |
| 3 | Planar Luxe MicroLED | Explicit luxury living positioning, 108 to 217 inch size range, 16:9 and 21:9 via the Komodo Series, and Planar Elite Installation for architectural integration. EverCare Lifetime Warranty adds long-term ownership confidence.12 13 |
Top Rated TVs for Value in Home Theater Setups 2026: The Best Choice for Your Home
The home theater display market in 2026 offers more genuine choices at more price points than at any prior point in the category's history. For buyers who can spend $1,000 to $3,500, the LG C5, Samsung S90F, Sony Bravia 8 II, and TCL QM8K represent four options at the consumer panel tier, each carrying meaningful trade-offs in brightness, format support, room flexibility, and size ceiling. None of them reaches beyond 83 inches, a hard constraint for buyers building a true home theater environment.
For buyers whose home theater budget and ambitions extend past the consumer panel tier, the comparison calculus changes entirely. Planar and Samsung The Wall deliver MicroLED at enterprise and architectural price points, with the installation infrastructure and brand heritage to match. JVW occupies the mid-market MicroLED space at pricing that is difficult to justify against the verified specification gap.
AWALL sits in a category it currently occupies alone: MicroLED at consumer-adjacent pricing, with published prices, a two-person DIY install path, and verified performance specs that exceed every other MicroLED option in this comparison at a lower price. The C-Series 135-inch at $46,750 outperforms JVW's 135-inch at $165,342 on brightness, native contrast, and cabinet weight. The I-Series at $115,000 delivers 2,500 nits, 30,000:1 native contrast, and 16-bit color processing. Both ship with published pricing, no quote required.
For buyers who have spent years overpaying for brand legacy on consumer panels, or who have been priced out of MicroLED by competitors who treat a quote process as a barrier to entry, AWALL's model is a different proposition. Two-time Best of Show recognition at InfoComm 2025 and CEDIA 2025 confirms that the industry's most knowledgeable evaluators reached the same conclusion.1 2
See AWALL Pricing and Specs Without Requesting a Quote
AWALL is the only MicroLED manufacturer that publishes pricing online. Every size, every configuration, no sales process required. Review the C-Series at awall.com, or call the team directly at +1 (800) 455-1450. If you want to evaluate the display before buying, AWALL offers C-Series demo kits for dealers and integrators. For custom configurations above 162 inches, the team handles sizing consultations directly.
View AWALL C-Series Pricing and Specs
References
- AWALL. “AWALL CoB MicroLED Display C Series.” https://awall.com/products/awall-cob-microled-display-copy
- AVNetwork. “Winners Announced: Best of Show at InfoComm 2025 for AV Technology.” https://www.avnetwork.com/news/winners-announced-best-of-show-at-infocomm-2025-for-av-technology
- Residential Systems. “2025 CEDIA Expo Best of Show Winners Announced.” https://www.residentialsystems.com/events/awards/2025-cedia-expo-best-of-show-winners-announced
- Rtings. “Samsung S90F OLED Review.” https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/samsung/s90f-oled
- Tom’s Guide. “Samsung S90F OLED TV Review.” https://www.tomsguide.com/tvs/oled-tvs/samsung-s90f-oled-tv-review
- AVForums. “Samsung S90F QD-OLED TV Review.” https://www.avforums.com/reviews/samsung-s90f-qe65s90fatxxu-qd-oled-tv-review.22792/
- Rtings. “LG C5 OLED Review.” https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/lg/c5-oled
- TechRadar. “LG C5 OLED TV Review.” https://www.techradar.com/televisions/lg-c5-oled-tv-review
- TechRadar. “I Tested the LG C6 and LG C5 OLED TVs Side-by-Side.” https://www.techradar.com/televisions/i-tested-the-lg-c6-and-lg-c5-oled-tvs-side-by-side
- Rtings. “Sony BRAVIA 8 II OLED Review.” https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/sony/bravia-8-ii-oled
- Sony. “BRAVIA 8 II.” https://electronics.sony.com/tv-video/televisions/all-tvs
- Rtings. “TCL QM8K Review.” https://www.rtings.com/tv/reviews/tcl/qm8k
- Digital Trends. “TCL QM8K Review.” https://www.digitaltrends.com/home-theater/tcl-qm8k-review/
- TCL. “TCL 65QM8K Series QD-Mini LED QLED 4K UHD Smart TV.” https://us.tcl.com/products/tcl-65-qm8k-series-qd-mini-led-qled-4k-uhd-smart-tv-with-google-tv-65qm8k
- Planar. “Planar Luxe MicroLED Datasheet.” https://res.cloudinary.com/iwh/image/upload/q_auto,g_center/assets/1/26/Planar_Luxe_MicroLED_Datasheet.pdf
- Planar. “Luxury Living.” https://www.planar.com/markets/luxury-living/
- Planar. “Planar EverCare Lifetime Warranty.” https://www.planar.com/support/planar-evercare-lifetime-warranty/




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