Skip to main content

At CES 2021, TCL put all other TV makers on notice: We’re just getting started

I’d like to take a moment, now that CES 2021 is heading into its final hours, to acknowledge TCL.

Ten years ago, I attended CES 2011. Among the enormous booths from TV titans like Sony, Panasonic, Samsung, and LG was a smaller booth from a brand I had never heard of. Yep, it was TCL. Looking around that booth and taking in the sights of the many TVs TCL was showing off, I had only one thought: Man, what bunch of junk.

What a difference a decade can make.

That sounds uncharitable, and I suppose it was, but context is everything. Back then, the major brands were showing off LCD TVs with very good black levels, contrast, and color, plasma TVs that were the pinnacle of picture quality, and 3D was just beginning to get a serious toehold. TCL’s TVs, by comparison, were small, boring-looking, and had poor black levels and contrast. They were also very cheap.

Well, what a difference a decade can make. One look at the TV landscape here at CES 2021, and it’s immediately apparent that TCL is continuing its rapid and unprecedented path to becoming the most important TV brand in the world.

Rapid rise

Well, perhaps it’s not entirely unprecedented. I’m reminded of Hyundai’s debut offering in Canada back in the early 1980s, a four-door hatchback called the Pony. Canadians snapped them up because, with a base price of $5,795, they were far cheaper than any other car at the time. Ten years later, you’d have been hard-pressed to find even one Pony still on the roads. They were poorly built, and not designed to withstand punishing Canadian winters. But as crappy as the Pony was, it gave Hyundai a much-needed presence in the North American market and the rest, as they say, is history.

TCL’s trajectory has been similar, but it has accomplished its evolution from bargain-basement to innovation leader in a fraction of the time it took Hyundai to emerge as a major force in its industry. The evidence abounds.

In 2014, TCL became one of the first TV makers to adopt the Roku software, thus creating its line of Roku TVs. The first smart TV models didn’t get a lot of praise for their picture quality, but there was wide agreement that the Roku TV platform was a game-changer for smart TV user experiences.

Home Theater Innovation

In 2016, TCL added 4K resolution to its Roku TV lineup, making it one of the most affordable ways to get a 4K TV. Again, its picture quality wasn’t much to brag about, but you couldn’t ignore that TCL was pushing into new TV territory at an accelerating pace.

One year later, in 2017, TCL created the P-Series, its first 4K Roku TV with HDR support. Bam! The P-Series stunned seasoned reviewers with its color and contrast, not so much because these TVs were better than the competition, but because they were just as good while costing hundreds of dollars less.

From that moment, TCL has been on a TV tech tear. Its 4-, 5-, and 6-Series became the value benchmark, eclipsing even Vizio, which had been the U.S. value leader. In 2019, it made a quantum leap (literally) when it introduced the 2019 8-Series, the company’s first quantum dot TV, which was also the first mini-LED TV ever sold, a full two years before mini-LED technology would make its way into competitors’ products.

TCL continues its push into territory that was once the exclusive domain of Sony, LG, and Samsung.

TCL used 2020 to double down on its mini-LED quantum dot display tech by adding both to the 6-Series — without increasing the price. Meanwhile, the less expensive 5-Series acquired quantum dots, making it one of the most affordable QLED TVs on the market. All three models, the 5-, 6-, and 8-Series, have earned high praise and strong reviews.

Still climbing

That brings us to CES 2021. This year, TCL continues its push into territory that was once the exclusive domain of Sony, LG, and Samsung. Its 6-Series will be gaining an 8K model, the company’s first 8K TV, and TCL is promising prices on these TVs that will continue the 6-Series’ reputation for extreme value.

It’s also committed to bringing its new OD-Zero mini-LED backlighting tech to market this year, which should produce the thinnest, and highest contrast, non-OLED TV to-date.

TCL Mini LED
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Finally, TCL is on track to produce three new TV models at the gargantuan 85-inch screen size. TCL is calling these giants its “XL” models, and they’ll include a 4-Series 4K version (which will likely set new affordability records for this size), as well as an 8K model.

So what does the future have in store for TCL? In the short term, we still hope that it will debut its first TVs based on the Vidrian mini-LED technology it showed at CES 2020. In the longer term, there’s reason to believe that the brand will expand into bleeding-edge display technology like QD-OLED. As it does so, you can bet it will continue to work on its picture-processing hardware and software.

Will we eventually see TCL TVs that threaten the picture quality supremacy of Sony and LG? If that seems far-fetched, keep in mind, back in the ’80s, no one could have expected Hyundai to produce a car that rivals the top luxury sedans from brands like Mercedes, BMW, and Audi. As they say, never say never.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen covers a variety of consumer technologies, but has a special interest in audio and video products, like spatial…
TCL QM8 mini-LED TV at CES 2023: a 98-inch giant with a built-in subwoofer
A 2023 TCL QM8 4K mini-led QLED TV in a living room, mounted over a fireplace.

TCL has arrived at CES 2023 with a revamped TV lineup that has more than a few surprises. In addition to announcing its plan to sell its first QD-OLED TV in 2023, TCL is bringing its mini-LED backlight technology to its largest QLED model, putting the brand in direct competition with Samsung, the only other company that makes a 98-inch mini-LED QLED TV.

TCL has also decided to rename its models, abandoning its 1-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 8-, and 6-Series for a simplified approach that divides the company's TVs into two main buckets, the high-end, QLED-powered Q Series, and the more affordable, non-QLED S Series. TCL's 2023 soundbars will also follow this new naming convention with Q and S Series models.

Read more
Samsung’s CES 2023 TVs get thinner, brighter, healthier, and better for gaming
Samsung 2022 QN900B 8K Neo QLED TV.

On display at CES 2023, Samsung's 2023 TV lineup is getting a wide variety of upgrades, including thinner designs, better sound systems, 4K cloud-based gaming, and some interesting health applications that the company is borrowing from its mobile division. Here's everything you need to know.
MicroLED gets smaller, more affordable
Samsung was an early promoter of microLED display tech, which uses tiny LED lights as individual pixels instead of using them as the backlight on an LCD-based TV (LED TV, mini-LED TV). Unfortunately, microLED TVs have tended to be huge (starting at 110 inches), expensive, and somewhat limited in resolution at smaller sizes.

The company's new Micro LED CX, at 76 inches, is its smallest yet, and Samsung promises it will also be the most affordable microLED TV ever released.

Read more
Hisense adds mini-LED and Google TV to its 2022 QLED TVs
Hisense 2022 ULED TVs.

In just a few years, Hisense has evolved from a relatively obscure brand to a company that makes an impressive range of affordable and feature-rich 8K, 4K, and laser TVs. At the end of 2021, the company finally debuted its first 8K TV, the U800GR, but at CES 2022, the company has revealed how the rest of its 4K products will benefit from new technologies like mini-LED backlighting, advanced gaming features, and Google TV, which replaces the older Android TV system on all of Hisense's non-Roku TV ULED models.

Here's the full run-down.
U9H Series

Read more