LG unveils 2025 flagship OLED TV line-up, including brightest-ever models, and smarter wireless 4K video tech

Estimated read time 5 min read



  • LG reveals high-end OLED TV models for 2025: LG G5 and LG M5
  • LG M5 has a more flexible wireless video transmission box
  • New OLED panels set to be brightest yet, with 165Hz support

LG has revealed its 2025 OLED TV lineup at CES 2025, with a brighter LG G5 OLED TV, and an updated LG M5 OLED TV. The latter will have greater flexibility in its Zero Connect Box placement, while both will have a brighter screen and new AI-centric interface for its webOS smart TV platform.

For OLEDs, the LG OLED M5, successor to the LG M4, will continue to use the Zero Connect wireless box for its cable connections and support 4K 144Hz with VRR including certified Nvidia G-Sync and AMD FreeSync for gaming. The M5 will also be the world’s first ‘True Wireless’ TV meaning no loss in picture or sound quality over wireless transmission, which means its Zero Connect box can be placed further away and in more locations than the M4 (but the TV will still need a power cable, so ‘True Wireless’ is perhaps a little ambitious).

Both the LG M5 and the LG G5 – which is the successor to one of 2024’s best OLED TVs, the LG G4 – will feature an Alpha 11 AI processor, which comes with the Brightness Booster Ultimate tech, which LG claims will make the G5 three times brighter than the LG B-series, its entry-level OLED TV. The LG G5 will also support up to a 165Hz refresh rate, surpassing many of the best gaming TVs available.

LG G4 OLED TV

Could we be seeing the brightest OLEDs yet at CES 2025? Reports suggest LG OLED panels of 3,700 nits could be available, which is a significant step-up over the LG G4 (pictured) – though we doubt the TVs will reach such heights anyway. (Image credit: LG Global)

LGs Evo OLEDs will also feature a Filmmaker Mode with a new feature called Ambient Light Compensation. This feature is applicable with models with a light sensor that analyzes the viewing environment and then aims to display the picture on screen “as the director intended” for that level of lighting. This new Filmmaker Mode was made in conjunction with the creative community.





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