Skip to main content

Sharp is bringing one of the first OLED Roku TVs to the U.S. in 2023

Sharp has been on the fringes of the U.S. TV market for several years, but that might be about to change. The company, which is still headquartered in Japan ,but has been majority-owned by Chinese manufacturing giant Foxconn since 2016, has announced that it plans to sell a Roku-powered 4K OLED TV in the U.S. in spring 2023. It could be the first opportunity for people to buy a Roku TV with an OLED panel. The company will also introduce its latest mini-LED-powered QLED TV, the Aquos XLED.

Sharp OLED TV.
Sharp’s Japan-only DS1 OLED TV Sharp

Details on both TVs are thin for now. But according to Sharp’s press release, the company plans to sell its OLED TV in 55- and 65-inch screen sizes. It will be powered by the Roku smart TV OS, as will the company’s entry-level LCD TVs, which will be available in 50-, 55-, 65-, and 75-inch sizes.

The news of Sharp’s Roku OLED TV comes just days after Roku announced that it has created a reference design for Roku-powered OLED TVs, and that it intended to start making its own TVs. This isn’t Sharp’s first OLED TV — the company has been selling OLED-based models under the Aquos OLED name for several years in Japan and other markets. We don’t yet know if Sharp will call its U.S. version Aquos OLED, too.

In Japan, Sharp’s OLED TVs are compatible with Dolby Vision, HDR10, and HLG, and are equipped with HDMI 2.1 inputs that support 4K at 12oHz.

Sharp’s 4K Aquos XLED will be available at the same time in the U.S. and shortly thereafter in additional countries like Canada and Mexico. It will ship in 65-, 70-, and 75-inch sizes, and its mini-LED backlighting will be subdivided into as many as 2,000 zones, which should give it very good control over black levels and blooming — where light from a bright area can spill over into a darker area of the screen.

The company says the Aquos XLED will be powered by the Google TV smart TV OS and will be equipped with “high-performance” speakers on the top and bottom of the screen. In what might be a taste of what’s to come, Sharp showcased a huge 120-inch version of the Aquos XLED at CES 2023. It claims this model is one of the world’s largest flat-screen displays powered by a mini-LED backlight.

No pricing was announced for any of these new models, but as soon as we find out the details, we’ll let you know.

Simon Cohen
Contributing Editor, A/V
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like…
Hisense debuts the UX, its brightest mini-LED TV at CES 2023
Hisense ULED X UX TV.

When it comes to TV technology, Hisense is all-in on mini-LED backlit QLED TVs. The company, which is known for its affordable yet dazzlingly bright TVs, has just revealed its brightest creation yet at CES 2023: the UX, an 85-inch 4K mini-LED QLED TV that is powered by Hisense's new ULED X platform and features more than 20,000 mini-LEDs, which give the UX a claimed peak brightness of 2,500 nits. The company's previous brightest TV, the U8H, had a claimed 1,500 nits but measured closer to 2,000.

That's going to be a very bright display, but Hisense says it can also exert a lot of control over that brightness thanks to more than 5,000 local dimming zones.  “Our engineers were tasked with making the best LED TV available, and they delivered with ULED X,” said David Gold, President of Hisense USA, in an emailed press release.

Read more
LG’s giant 97-inch M3 OLED TV eliminates HDMI cables
Man playing a video game on an LG 97-inch Signature OLED M3 4K TV.

Wall-mounting a TV is no picnic, especially when that TV measures 97 diagonal inches. But LG's new Signature OLED M Series TV could make that task much easier. The giant, 4K OLED TV uses LG's Zero Connect wireless technology to effectively eliminate the need for any AV cabling from AV receivers, set-top boxes, soundbars, or game consoles to the TV. As long as the OLED M3 has power, it doesn't need any other wires. LG is showing the M3 for the first time at CES 2023 but hasn't offered any details on price or availability.

The M3's wireless connection is powered by the included Zero Connect box -- a cheekily-named gadget that is essentially the same device as Samsung's One Connect box, except that the Zero Connect box uses a fully wireless connection to the M3 instead of Samsung's thin umbilical cord. One, Zero ... you get the idea. LG says the new box will have "multiple" ports for connecting devices, though it hasn't said how many and what kind.

Read more
Roku will start making its own Roku TVs and OLED reference design
A Roku-branded smart TV.

Your next Roku TV may well say Roku on the front. After years of leading the smart TV industry by licensing its operating system to other manufacturers, Roku announced its own Roku Select and Roku Plus Series televisions — the first to bear the Roku name from front to back -- today at CES 2023.

While the names are slightly confusing, the gist is this: There are 11 models spanning from 24 to 75 inches. The Select lineup will top out at 1080p resolution and include a basic Roku Voice Remote, while the Plus Series will sport 4K resolution panels and include the Roku Voice Remote Pro, which is rechargeable. Prices start at $119 on the low end and and top out at $999.

Read more