
While the return of LG’s “Wallpaper TV” (W6) after a four-year hiatus grabbed plenty of headlines at CES 2026, LG’s broader OLED lineup arguably brings more practical upgrades for most buyers. The headline feature this year is the expansion of LG’s 4-layer Tandem WOLED panels into the mainstream G6 and C6 series.
There is a catch, however. While the flagship G6 series gets the Tandem panel across the board, the treatment is more selective in the C-series, reserved only for the larger screen sizes. Let’s take a look at it in more detail below:
LG G6 series OLED TVs: features
The G6 remains the undisputed flagship of LG’s 4K OLED lineup for 2026, sporting the second-generation 4-layer Tandem WOLED panel in almost every size. Now marketed with “Hyper Radiant Color Technology”, the main takeaway here is brightness: LG claims a 20 percent bump over last year’s G5 and nearly four times the luminance of the B6 series. It remains to be seen if the projected numbers match up in testing.
LG has also addressed the reflectiveness of the OLED panels and applied a new coating to the 55, 65, 77, and 83-inch models that cuts glare by roughly 50 percent, helping preserve those deep OLED blacks even in sunlit rooms. Do note that the 48-inch version skips this upgrade.

Powering the G6 is the new Alpha 11 Gen 3 processor, which claims to bring a significant speed boost, especially in NPU performance. This allows for native 4K 120Hz cloud gaming on GeForce Now and cuts controller latency down to 1ms via Bluetooth ULL. However, there are not many upgrades in terms of connectivity, as it sticks with HDMI 2.1 rather than adopting the newer HDMI 2.2 standard. There’s also support for HDMI VRR, Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync.
LG C6 series OLED TVs: features
The C-series has traditionally been the sweet spot for buyers, but this year it gets a bit more complicated. LG is splitting the line into three variants: the C6, CS6, and C6H. The C6H is the one you want to pay attention to, as the 77 and 83-inch models receive the upgraded 4-layer Tandem OLED panel. It’s not the exact same tuning found in the G6, but it offers a brightness capability roughly three times that of the B6, putting it close to last year’s flagship G5 performance.
The standard C6 and CS6 models, as well as the smaller C6H sizes, stick with the older panel tech, meaning they won’t see a dramatic jump in brightness. All variants, however, benefit from the new Alpha 11 Gen 3 processor, bringing the same gaming and processing perks as the G6, including 4K 165Hz support for PC gaming, HDMI VRR, Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync, and the new webOS 26 interface.
The new webOS brings deeper AI integration with Microsoft Copilot for voice queries and Google Gemini for generating custom art in the Gallery+ section. LG also promises a smoother, faster interface and improved smart home control.








