Tuesday, January 10th 2023

Hisense Makes a Big Push Into Premium Gaming Monitors and Home Cinema

The metoric rise of Hisense as a consumer electronics giant is attributable to its cost-effective smart TVs and home appliances, but with the 2023 International CES, the company stated it intention to dominate the gaming monitor and home cinema markets. The company showed off a wealth of conventional-sized and large-format gaming displays based on cutting-edge tech such as Mini-LED illuminated Fast IPS. The new G7H is a new line of planar 25-inch and 27-inch gaming monitors that feature just that—a Fast IPS panel with 576 min-LED backlit illumination diodes, 170 Hz refresh-rate with 1 ms response time, 1440p resolution, DisplayHDR 600 certification, and 97% coverage of DCI-P3, along with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro.

The U7K is technically a 43-inch TV that Hisense wants to market as a large format gaming monitor, although it does pack the entire set of the company's smart TV features. The display offers 4K Ultra HD resolution a Mini-LED illuminated Quantum Dot panel, 144 Hz refresh-rate, Dolby Vision Atmos, and 1,000 nits maximum brightness. Hisense also unveiled its Laser TV home projectors ranging for projection sizes ranging between 65-inch to 150-inch, featuring a triple-laser light source, 107% BT.2020 coverage, 1,600 ANSI lumens brightness, 4K Ultra HD native resolution, and Dolby Atmos. Its in-built 2.1 speaker set has been sourced from JBL by Harman. The projector supports both Chromecast (in-built), and Apple AirPlay.
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13 Comments on Hisense Makes a Big Push Into Premium Gaming Monitors and Home Cinema

#1
ZoneDymo
Idk how they intend to dominate anything with products so generic they might as well not exist.
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#2
Kohl Baas
ZoneDymoIdk how they intend to dominate anything with products so generic they might as well not exist.
Price would be a nice angle of attack...
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#3
Vayra86
LOL. That stand with the keyboard right in front of a 43 inch panel. Totally looks comfy
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#4
Zorg35000
ZoneDymoIdk how they intend to dominate anything with products so generic they might as well not exist.
So generic ?
How many 43" UHD 144Hz there are on the market ?
Just a few actually, so i would say the U7K is welcome.
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#5
Terronium-12
Yeah, I'm gonna need a price on these. Have an H8G and love it, so I'm onboard with this.
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#6
pavle
Vayra86LOL. That stand with the keyboard right in front of a 43 inch panel. Totally looks comfy
Clearly to put you "in medias res". :)
Seriously though a neighbour just a few weeks ago bought Hisense 65" 4K TV and the picture is quite amazing for that price.
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#7
Minus Infinity
Wow that's crap, only a pathetic HDR600 from a 576 zone mini-led monitor. Should be HDR1000.
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#8
trsttte
Minus InfinityWow that's crap, only a pathetic HDR600 from a 576 zone mini-led monitor. Should be HDR1000.
Why? The biggest difference is maximum brightness which, when the contrast is shit, doesn't mean shit. The basic HDR certification is very flawed, some monitors in the past year or two have been getting certified without even using any meaningfull local dimming.

HDR600 vs HDR1000 in this to me just says they decided to not drive the backlight as hard, don't know why they would do that but I don't think it's really a disadvantage.
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#9
kapone32
If you have a 1000 nits HDR monitor there is no way, if you use it daily you will run it that high. The best thing to do with modern panels like these is to turn the colour up and slide the contrast up.
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#10
caroline!
If those are as good as their TVs... oh boy. 90% TVs I've seen at the recycling centre are hisense or rebrands with hisense panels, and since the panel it's usually the thing dying there's not much to do other than bulk selling the metal and melting the plastics.
The backlight LEDs can be repurposed, made a few battery powered lights with them, both long and small.
btarunrcost-effective smart TVs and home appliances
AKA trash. I'd rather pay more for something that will last me at least 5 years than being cheap and wasting my money, I won't buy smart TVs or smart anything but if I did, I'd never buy something from Hisense.
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#11
Kohl Baas
caroline!If those are as good as their TVs... oh boy. 90% TVs I've seen at the recycling centre are hisense or rebrands with hisense panels, and since the panel it's usually the thing dying there's not much to do other than bulk selling the metal and melting the plastics.
The backlight LEDs can be repurposed, made a few battery powered lights with them, both long and small.


AKA trash. I'd rather pay more for something that will last me at least 5 years than being cheap and wasting my money, I won't buy smart TVs or smart anything but if I did, I'd never buy something from Hisense.
Cost-effective doesn't necessary means it's not going to last. There are so many features inflating a top-notch TV/monitor which many of us never use. For example I had to pay an RGB shitshow buying my monitor. Something that were turned off 6 years ago.
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#12
Fatalfury
Well the BIG TV manufactures like Samsung,LG..then Sony are already in
so why not Hisense?:roll:

but yea but i think they are a little "too late" to the party.
with the pandemic over(evrywhere other than china), and recession looming.
Computer hardware are seeing a spiral trend downwards(even TSMC) from GPU to monitors after a good fun for 2 years(2020-2022).

and with every brand & its subbrand launching thier own gaming monitor nowdays.. its a hard fit.. but good to have competition.. Hisense might as well be a OEM
so the prices fall much more.
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#13
tarbear123
will they be 21x9 (with expandable width for widescreen content (whenever available on-screen))?
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