Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

Sansui builds on its OLED TV line with new sizes, and adds new AI gaming monitor

Add as a preferred source on Google
 
CES 2026
Read and watch our complete CES coverage here

Sansui made a surprise entry back into the U.S. market last fall with the release of its 55-inch OLED — the least expensive OLED on the market. At hundreds less than competitors from LG, Samsung, and Sony, the company made waves when it came out. We had a sample in our test lab for an unboxing and were impressed with what we saw. Now at CES, the company is expanding the line to three sizes — 55-, 65-, and 77-inch models.


CES Brand Spotlight Banner
Digital Trends received compensation for considering coverage of these products. The brand had no input on the editorial content and did not influence the coverage.

There’s an enhanced karaoke mode for family nights that adds some gamification with performance scoring for pitch, rhythm, and style accuracy. It will also keep track of rankings with a family leaderboard, and can track individual progress as your karaoke skills improve. All sizes will have Dolby Vision and Atmos support, 120Hz refresh rate, variable refresh rate (VRR), and auto low latency mode (ALLM).

Sansui 65-inch OLED 65VO
Chris Hagan / Digital Trends

The TV uses the Google TV OS (one of our favorites), and has two HDMI 2.1-capable inputs (one with eARC) and two HDMI 2.0 inputs.

Sansui AI Gaming Monitor
Chris Hagan / Digital Trends

In addition to the new OLED TV sizes, Sansui is debuting a 27-inch WQHD (2,560 x 1,440) AI gaming monitor, which was named a CES Innovation Awards 2025 Honoree. It will use AI video processing and real-time optimization to improve images and aid in smooth gameplay. There are two models, one with 240Hz refresh rate and one with 300Hz. AI will also be used for power-saving capabilities — with adaptive dimming and an option to wake from sleep when approached — as well as helping with your posture and alerting you when you’ve been sitting too long.

John Higgins
Former Former Senior Editor, A/V
John Higgins is the former Senior Editor of A/V at Digital Trends.
Spotify just made it easier to catch up on long reads without actually reading
Long-form journalism is coming to Spotify, and it fits right in your commute.
The atlantic article playing on spotify

It seems that Spotify wants to become a one-stop solution for all our audio needs. The music streaming giant slowly added audiobooks and podcasts to its platform, and now it is adding magazine articles. 

In a post on its website, Spotify said that over 650 long-form magazine articles are now available to listen to. The curated collection is produced by Spotify's in-house audiobooks team and pulls from some of the biggest names in publishing, including Rolling Stone, The Atlantic, Vogue, Variety, Billboard, GQ, WIRED, Vanity Fair, and Pitchfork.

Read more
Apple AirPods Pro 3 review: Eight months later, a worthy pick that keeps on giving
Apple's flagship earbuds are refined, more resilient, and explore further than any rival out there.
AirPods Pro 3 top view

Quick Take

I picked the AirPods Pro 3 with the primary motivation of enjoying better noise isolation and sound quality. But over time, I've extracted more utility out of them than an average pair of premium earbuds. Using them to correct my posture while working? Yes. Heart rate monitoring? Yeah, that too.

Read more
Google is not killing your old and aging Chromecast, after all
Users feared Google had silently killed the original Chromecast, but the company says a fix is here.
Chromecast 2015

For a brief moment, the internet genuinely believed Google had finally decided to kill off the original Chromecast, after multiple Gen 1 users reported casting failures and apps refusing to connect over the past few days. Honestly, considering the tiny streaming dongle is now more than a decade old, nobody would have been completely shocked, but thankfully, Google now says the issue has been resolved, and the aging Chromecast survives another day.

Google says your old Chromecast is still safe for now

Read more