- The first 8K 120Hz monitor is recently shown at the exhibition week event
- The use of real world for 8K monitors still feels away from reach
- Exhibition manufacturers continue to build while the market remains without convincing
In the recent event of the 2025 exhibition week, the Chinese BOE firm showed the first 31.5 -inch 8K monitor capable of working at 120Hz.
The CR3000 offers a contrast ratio of 8000: 1, a range of 99% DCI-P3 colors, and also supports 240Hz in 4K mode.
BOE, who is the world’s largest panel manufacturer and was also a sponsor of the show, said 8k association He hopes to start mass production later in 2025, although the details about the prices and the final integration of the product are still unknown.
Other 8K panels on display
The exhibition week often serves as a look where screen technology can be headed instead of where it is currently. That pattern continued this year with several other 8K exhibition panels.
TCL/CSOT brought an OLED 8K television panel printed with ink injection, a project built in part from its acquisition of Joed, and Sel surprised the attendees with an 8K 8K 8K panel of 8.3 inches that offered more than 1,000ppi, which makes it the entire more clear color that is shown to date.
In addition to his beast of 8k 120Hz, BOE had a series of other products on display. These included the latest version of their ADS Pro Minved Ub Cell 4.0 televisions, which aim to challenge OLED with a deeper contrast and better efficiency, and a 4K 85 -inch panel with an RGB retroilumination system that is executed in a filter without a filter that could one day reduce the use and complexity of the power, especially in 8K applications.
It also had a 3D screen prototype with ocular tracking based on a 16K development. Although it is still the early stage, the quality of the image and parallage control impressed those who could see it in action.
Still before your time
The BOE CR3000 panel arrives at a time when the widest market is still reaching the 4K high sodas games, much less 8K.
While PC players have begun to see that conventional GPUs offer a stable 4K60 game, which pushes four times in resolution and doubled in the update raises some difficult questions. The expansion and generation of frames can be more necessary than a characteristic if this panel can be used for games or creative work.
While I can’t avoid being impressed with BOE’s 8k 120Hz monitor, it seems that he is in advance of his time. Hardware to drive it effectively does not exist on a scale, and most buyers are probably not ready for what would surely be a high -cost niche product.
8K monitors were expected to arrive at the main current a few years ago, but that did not happen. This last panel can be technically impressive, but for my part I am not convinced that the world is ready for it.