LG introduces Micro RGB evo TV, its most advanced display yet, ahead of CES 2026

LG has announced its most advanced LCD television to date, the LG Micro RGB evo, which will make its global debut at CES 2026. The new TV marks LG’s first flagship RGB display and represents a major step beyond traditional Mini LED technology, bringing OLED-like precision to the LCD segment.

LG Micro RGB: sizes and availability

The LG Micro RGB evo (model MRGB95) will be available in 75-inch, 86-inch and 100-inch screen sizes, clearly targeting the ultra-premium home entertainment segment. LG will officially showcase the TV at CES 2026 in Las Vegas from January 6 to 9.

With Micro RGB evo, LG appears to be positioning itself between high-end Mini LED and OLED TVs, offering OLED-level colour precision while retaining the brightness advantages of LCD technology. Pricing and India availability details are expected to be revealed closer to launch.

The LG Micro RGB evo uses Micro RGB technology, where extremely small red, green and blue LEDs operate independently to control light output with far greater accuracy. According to LG, this allows the TV to deliver more precise colours, higher contrast and improved brightness control compared to conventional LCD panels.

At the heart of the display is LG’s upgraded α11 AI Processor Gen 3, powered by a dual AI engine. Brand says the processor enables Dual Super Upscaling, which simultaneously enhances sharpness and image balance, resulting in more natural-looking visuals across different types of content.

Colour accuracy is the key highlight

One of the biggest talking points of the Micro RGB evo is its colour reproduction. LG says the TV achieves 100 per cent colour gamut coverage across BT.2020, DCI-P3 and Adobe RGB, a claim that has been certified by Intertek. In simple terms, this means the TV can display an extremely wide and accurate range of colours, making it suitable not just for home entertainment but also for professional-grade content viewing, digital editing and HDR cinema.

To further enhance picture quality, the TV uses Micro Dimming Ultra, which controls over a thousand dimming zones with high precision. This helps retain detail in both bright highlights and dark scenes, improving contrast without the blooming issues often associated with large LCD panels.

Beyond hardware, LG is also focusing on user experience. The Micro RGB evo runs on the latest version of webOS, featuring personalised tools like Voice ID, AI Picture and Sound Wizard, and a customisable “My Page” home screen. LG also mentions that they have added an upgraded AI Concierge, AI Chatbot and AI Search to help users discover content more easily and fine-tune their viewing preferences.

The LG Micro RGB evo is clearly not designed for the average TV buyer. It is aimed at users with deep pockets or those who care deeply about colour accuracy, image processing, and large-screen immersion. This includes home cinema enthusiasts, professionals working with visual content, and premium buyers looking for a centrepiece TV in the 75-inch and above category.

In the ultra-premium TV segment, LG’s Micro RGB evo enters a space already occupied by some serious contenders. Samsung’s upcoming Micro RGB TVs (2026 lineup) are the most direct rivals, using a similar RGB-based architecture but leaning heavily on Samsung’s AI processing and glare-free panels. Sony, meanwhile, continues to push its Bravia XR Mini LED TVs like the X95L and successor models, which prioritise contrast accuracy, tone mapping and creator-focused colour tuning rather than raw colour volume.

Meanwhile, there’s also growing pressure from Chinese brands. TCL’s X11G Max and C855/C955 Mini LED series, along with Hisense’s UX and U8K/U9K models, offer extremely high brightness and dense local dimming at comparatively aggressive prices.