Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Promos
  3. News

TCL shows off display with a blinding brightness that’s 5x higher than iPhone 17 Pro

The sun will never be an issue for next-gen smartphones.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Electronics, Display, Prototype
TCL Ultra-Bright Smartphone Display Prototype TCL
MWC 2026
Read our complete coverage of Mobile World Congress

At the Mobile World Congress 2026 (MWC) stage, TCL showed just how far smartphone display technology can go. A new prototype panel was unveiled that reaches a staggering 15,000 nits of peak brightness. That’s roughly five times brighter than the display on Apple’s iPhone 17 Pro, putting the concept firmly in the “blindingly bright” category.

A display designed for extreme visibility

The new super-bright panel shown at MWC is designed primarily to improve outdoor visibility and readability under harsh lighting conditions. With its brightness levels reaching an impressive 15,000 nits, the screen would theoretically remain visible even in extremely bright sunlight. For context, the iPhone 17 Pro typically tops out around 3,000 nits, meaning TCL’s cutting-edge screen is pushing brightness to an entirely new category of mobile displays.

Recommended Videos

Such high brightness could prove useful for applications like navigation, outdoor photography, or even augmented reality experiences where screen readability is critical. The prototype TCL CSOT’s broader showcase of next-generation panel technologies aimed at pushing mobile screens “beyond limits”. TCL CSOT’s Super Pixel display technology is a new approach to pixel structure that aims to improve image clarity, power efficiency, and refresh rate performance.

Not coming to phones just yet

Despite the impressive numbers, TCL’s ultra-bright display remains a prototype demonstration, so it’s still not ready for commercial devices. Many display concepts shown at tech events like MWC serve as technology previews rather than immediate products, allowing manufacturers to showcase capabilities that may appear in future smartphone, tablets, or wearable devices.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
Cash app just launched a wand for payments because phone scans and taps are so boring
Cash App just launched an NFC-enabled wand that lets you tap and pay at any contactless terminal
cash-app-wand-for-payment

Contactless payments are great, but have you ever paid for your coffee with a magic wand?

Cash App, the digital payments service run by Block, has just launched the Cash App Wand – a pearlescent, star-shaped, NFC-enabled keychain accessory that lets you tap to pay at any contactless terminal. Yes, it is a real product that costs $25, and it is available right now for Cash App Card holders to buy in the app.

Read more
What to get the mom who says she doesn’t need anything
Most Mother's Day gifts end up in a drawer a week later. These two are designed to stick around.
SKG Mothers Day gift tech

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with SKG

Buying a meaningful Mother’s Day gift is harder than it sounds, and most of the usual options don’t hold up beyond the day itself. The SKG G7 Pro Fold 3.0 neck massager and the SKG W9 Ultra 2.0 lower back massager, engineered for daily, intelligent recovery, are a different kind of gift. Both are 15% off from April 25th to May 8th, both are built around daily use rather than novelty, and both address the kind of neck and back discomfort that tends to build up quietly over years of desk work, commuting, and everything in between.

Read more
Streamline your digital life with 50% off a top-rated password manager
Save 50% on Personal and Family plans with Keeper’s New Year sale
Keeper Security New Year Sale: 50% Off Password Manager

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with Keeper Security

We spend January organizing our physical spaces: clearing out closets, tidying the garage, upgrading our gym kits. Yet, we often leave our digital lives in a state of chaotic vulnerability. Using the same password for every login or relying on a browser to remember your banking credentials isn't just risky; it’s sloppy.

Read more