At CES 2026, Hisense is expanding its multi-primary color strategy across televisions, MicroLED displays, and laser projection, highlighting continued investment in color accuracy, large-format viewing, and flexible installation options. The announcements span flagship and mainstream TVs, an ultra-large MicroLED concept display, and new additions to the company’s Laser Home Cinema portfolio.
RGB MiniLED TV Lineup Led by 116UXS Flagship
Hisense is leading its CES TV news with the next evolution of its RGB MiniLED technology, introduced to consumers in 2025. The 2026 lineup is anchored by the 116UXS flagship, which debuts what the company calls RGB MiniLED evo, a four-primary backlight system that adds cyan to the traditional red, green, and blue MiniLED structure.
According to Hisense, the addition of cyan is designed to improve wavelength-level color control, enabling smoother gradients, more natural tonal transitions, and improved shadow detail without oversaturation. The 116UXS is powered by the Hi-View AI Engine RGB chipset, which manages tens of thousands of local dimming zones, and is rated to deliver up to 110 percent of the BT.2020 color space.
The 116UXS features a nearly bezel-free design with a slim 1.57-inch profile and includes a built-in 6.2.2-channel audio system tuned by Devialet Opéra de Paris.
Beyond the flagship, Hisense is expanding RGB MiniLED technology into the new UR9 and UR8 Series, bringing second-generation RGB MiniLED architecture to a wider range of screen sizes, from 55 inches up to 100 inches. The company positions these models as a more accessible entry point into multi-primary MiniLED performance, offering improved color separation, saturation, and consistency compared to conventional premium LED TVs, while maintaining performance in bright rooms and fast-motion content.
Industry-First RGBY MicroLED Display Debuts
In the ultra-large display category, Hisense is unveiling the 163MX RGBY MicroLED display, which has been named a CES 2026 Innovation Awards Best of Innovation honoree. The 163MX introduces a four-primary RGBY (red, green, blue, yellow) MicroLED architecture, adding a yellow subpixel to address spectral gaps typically present in standard RGB MicroLED systems.
Hisense says the additional yellow primary improves color fidelity in the 500–600 nm range, enhancing warmth and tonal accuracy. The display is rated to achieve up to 100 percent of the BT.2020 color space and maintains chromatic and luminance uniformity across more than 33 million subpixels.
Despite its 163-inch size, the 163MX features a 32 mm-thin profile and a zero-gap wall-mount design intended to support architectural integration in premium residential and commercial environments.
Hisense, like most other TV makers, is doubling down on RGB technology which appears now to be the most cutting-edge display technology, potentially surpassing OLED and QLED.
Laser Projection Portfolio Expands With XR10 and PX4-PRO
Hisense is also expanding its Laser Home Cinema lineup with the introduction of the XR10 and PX4-PRO projectors, building on more than a decade of laser display development and its TriChroma laser technology platform.
The XR10 is positioned as a high-performance laser projector for both dedicated theaters and living spaces. It is powered by the company’s LPU 3.0 digital laser engine and a pure RGB triple-laser light source, delivering up to 6,000 ANSI lumens. The projector incorporates a 16-element all-glass lens system, an automatic IRIS lens mechanism, and a fully sealed liquid-cooling system designed to manage heat and maintain long-term performance.
According to Hisense, the XR10 supports screen sizes from 65 inches to 300 inches and uses a four-camera plus dual time-of-flight sensing system with AI-based auto-adjustment to enable flexible installation, including side projection with geometric correction of up to ±15 degrees.
The PX4-PRO ultra-short-throw projector builds on the PX3-PRO platform and is designed for multipurpose living spaces. It supports projection sizes up to 200 inches, delivers 3,500 ANSI lumens, and achieves up to 6000:1 contrast using a dynamic IRIS system. The PX4-PRO includes TriChroma laser technology, IMAX Enhanced certification, and ultra-low-latency performance for gaming applications.
Unified Focus on Color, Scale, and Flexibility
Across its 2026 lineup, Hisense is emphasizing multi-primary color systems as a unifying theme, spanning RGB MiniLED televisions, RGBY MicroLED displays, and TriChroma laser projection. The strategy reflects a broader effort to scale color-accurate, large-format display technologies across multiple form factors, use cases, and price tiers.
Hisense will showcase its full 2026 display portfolio at CES 2026, January 6–9, in the Las Vegas Convention Center, Central Hall, Booth 17704.






