The most “affordable” MicroLED TV offering in the lineup is the $109,999.00 89-inch model, then the 101-inch for $129.999.00, and the biggest one at 114 inches for a whopping $149,999.00. That’s enough to buy a Mercedes-Benz G-Wagen.
Each MicroLED is self-emitting, with no backlight, so it works similarly to OLED but without a similar risk of burn-in while still delivering deep blacks and high contrast. The LEDs are assembled in bezel-less panels so that can also be set up in almost any , as we saw with The Wall displays intended for commercial applications and, for some reason, Dane Cook’s house.
In 2021, Samsung introduced a 110-inch model that looked more like a regular TV with no modular options, which it has continued to iterate on — last year’s lineup even included a 76-inch version.
Samsung’s Class MicroLED TVs are listed on Samsung’s online store, but all are currently “out of stock.”
https://www.theverge.com/2024/6/5/24172262/samsung-microled-tv-89-101-114-inch-2024