One of the major technology industry events of the year is the Consumer Electronics Showor the CES. Big announcements come from big tech companies every year, and Samsung is no exception. Game Rant recently looked at some of the technology presented by the manufacturer at CES 2025 and, of course, the TV did not succeed. While Samsung's lineup includes larger sizes and 8K resolution, the biggest development in its 2025 lineup is how the QN series takes advantage of artificial intelligence.
Samsung's QN Series of TVs
This family of Samsung TVs–including the QN900F, QN800F, and QN700F–come with the NQ4 AI Gen 3 processor. These processors will offer a way to interact with one's favorite viewing with features such as identifying filming locations, downloading photos of actors, or learning to cook food shown on TV shows and purchasing ingredients. In theory, these AI chips can upscale lower definition content for 4K to match the resolution of the display.
The QN90F will feature a model with one of the largest consumer displays on the market at 115 inches. If the size of the pixels increases with the size of the screen, Samsung uses its new work with AI, using supersized sound technology to reduce the disadvantages related to the size class. The most impressive use of AI technology developed by Samsung in recent years is its ability to transform old media. The unique look of the first color TV is, ironically, a thing of the past for Samsung's AI. Watched television had the ability to pick up such programs M*A*S*H and turn it into a picture taken today.
AI has even been implemented to provide adaptive audio. This AI suite, Vision AI, can even provide home security, using the Knox Matrix service to encrypt data while monitoring the environment for sudden and unexpected movements and sounds that may occur. indicates danger in the house. All of these will be available on the screen with a refresh rate focused on gamers up to 165 hertz on the new S95F model. The company claims that combining its AI suite with this refresh rate can deliver some of the most impressive and realistic image quality in the industry.
Making television a museum
Another feature that is a big advantage for players is the increased concentration of anti-glare. Samsung says that almost 3 out of 5 people consider anti-glare to be a priority for their viewing and gaming experience, so the company has focused a lot on providing the number 2025 as the best – in this case, the lowest – reflection is possible. . This doubles what Samsung previously put out with the S95D. The new S95F television features a series of anti-glare design decisions, some of which lead to one of Samsung's most interesting lines: the Frame.
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The defining feature of the Frame is what it looks like when it's gone. Unlike the ubiquitous black glass screens when cut, the Frame focuses on other Samsung features to turn your TV into a work of art. Drawing from hundreds of galleries and thousands of works of art, Frame displays images of the user's choice when they leave. Its shape is designed to resemble a minimalist, minimalist modern frame (hence the name) to make it look like a print of a famous work of art, such as Van Gogh's Starry Night, when not in use. The company promises that the Frame will provide quality pictures at home.
The Frame's anti-glare capabilities, neo-qLED display, 144 hertz refresh rate, and Pantone-certified colors add to the ability to disguise a television as a work of art that brings an air of authenticity to the image. paintings available in the Samsung collection. It should be noted, however, that Samsung's collection of masterpieces is not limited to Frame TVs, but can be found in most of 2025.
This aesthetic design, and protruding from the wall, will be hampered by the problem of cable management, so the Frame does not have cables. Instead, Samsung boasts a Wireless One Connect box, which manages the cable for the TV.
All in all, this development of something that Samsung has been planning for a long time makes them a company to watch. CES opens on January 7th.