3 Minutes
Samsung has opened the curtain on its 2026 Micro RGB TV lineup in the US, and it is clearly aiming high. The new range introduces the R95H and R85H series, stretching from a compact 55 inches all the way up to a massive 115 inches. In other words, whether you are fitting out a living room, a media room, or something closer to a private cinema, there is now a bigger spread of options to choose from.
A different kind of brightness
The headline feature is Samsung’s Micro RGB display technology. Instead of using conventional backlighting, the panels rely on thousands of microscopic red, green, and blue LEDs that illuminate the image directly. That shift matters. It helps cut down on color bleed, sharpens accuracy, and gives the picture a cleaner, more controlled look.
Samsung says the displays cover the full BT.2020 color standard, with verification from VDE. The R95H also adds a glare reduction layer, a practical touch for anyone watching in a bright room with windows that never quite cooperate.

Under the hood, the new Micro RGB AI Engine Pro handles real-time picture tuning, adjusting sharpness, color, and motion as content plays. Samsung is backing that up with a set of supporting tools: Micro RGB Color Booster Pro for dull-looking scenes, Micro RGB HDR Pro for stronger brightness and contrast, and AI Motion Enhancer Pro for fast action, whether that is a football match, a racing game, or scrolling text. HDR10+ Advanced is also on board for finer brightness control and smoother playback.
Gaming is not an afterthought here. The R95H supports a refresh rate of up to 165Hz, while the R85H reaches 144Hz. For players, that means less blur, less lag, and a more responsive feel when the action gets hectic.
Sound gets the premium treatment too. Dolby Atmos and Object Tracking Sound are both supported, helping audio follow the movement on screen rather than sitting flat beneath it. Samsung’s Q-Symphony feature is included as well, allowing up to five Samsung audio devices to work together in sync.
Design stays deliberately minimal. The R95H supports Wireless One Connect, giving buyers the option to reduce cable clutter or go fully wireless. Both models can be wall-mounted with a Slim Fit bracket, and both support the Samsung Art Store, which now offers more than 5,000 artworks along with a rotating free selection.

The TVs ship with Samsung’s updated One UI Tizen platform, which includes Samsung TV Plus with more than 2,700 free streaming channels and programs, plus Gaming Hub for cloud gaming. Samsung says the software will receive up to seven years of updates, a promise that should help the sets feel less disposable in the long run.
Pricing starts at $1,599.99 for the 55-inch R85H and rises to $6,499.99 for the 85-inch R95H.
The 115-inch MR95F carry-over model is listed at $29,999.99, while a 100-inch version is expected to arrive later this year. For buyers chasing a giant-screen TV with next-gen display tech, Samsung has just made the argument a lot louder.
Comments
Armin
Is BT.2020 coverage really full on a consumer set? feels like marketing speak. also who tested motion at 165Hz on 85-115 inch panels, curious about input lag.
coreflux
wow Micro RGB sounds insane! but 115-inch at $30k? dream cinema or flex? color accuracy claims excite me, still skeptical about blooming in bright rooms tho.
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