From 4K and HDR to Premium TV Audio Quality
High-end televisions used to compete almost entirely on resolution, brightness, and color, but the latest flagship models show that premium TV audio quality is becoming just as important as the picture. As screens grow larger and viewing rooms stay the same size, manufacturers are rethinking how sound should behave in the living room. Instead of treating audio as an afterthought, brands are integrating sophisticated speaker arrays, AI-driven processing, and tightly coupled soundbar ecosystems that turn TVs into complete immersive audio systems. Technologies such as RGB Mini LED backlighting and advanced laser TV projection now provide bright, accurate images that can stand up to daylight. To match that visual impact, TV makers are focusing on spatial sound, dialogue clarity, and smarter voice control, blurring the line between television, smart speaker, and home theater receiver in a single, coordinated system.
Spatial Hearing AI Technology Brings Human-Like Listening to LG OLED TVs
LG’s flagship OLED TV series now incorporate Kardome’s Spatial Hearing AI technology, signaling a shift toward audio intelligence as a core differentiator. Rather than simply boosting volume, the system uses human-like voice localization and isolation to identify where a person is speaking from and focus on their voice, even when the room is noisy or multiple people are talking. This enables a more natural “no-mute” experience, where users can issue commands without pausing content or shouting over background sound. The AI can distinguish a user’s speech from competing noise sources such as household appliances or the TV’s own playback. That capability not only improves voice user interface reliability but also lays the groundwork for more advanced multiuser interactions and personalized control. LG’s deployment of this spatial hearing AI technology in its OLED sets illustrates how premium TV audio is evolving beyond simple sound reproduction toward context-aware listening.
Hisense Xplorer X1 Pro: Laser TV Projection Meets Harman Kardon 6.1.2 Audio
Hisense’s Xplorer X1 Pro laser TV series illustrates how display and audio innovation are converging in premium systems. Built around the company’s CineCore light engine with an RGB triple-color laser and DLP architecture, the projector delivers native 4K resolution and a wide BT.2020 color gamut, supported by a nano-spectral selective screen that helps maintain contrast in bright rooms. On the audio side, Hisense partners with Harman Kardon for a 6.1.2-channel distributed surround setup, packing nine speakers rated at 120W and a dedicated wireless subwoofer that extends down to 33Hz. Screen-emitting audio technology vibrates the display surface to align sound with on-screen action, enhancing the sense of realism. With Dolby Atmos and DTS:X decoding, the Xplorer X1 Pro positions laser TV projection not just as a big-screen alternative, but as a fully integrated immersive audio system that rivals traditional home theater separates.

Soundbar Integration Completes the Immersive Audio Ecosystem
As TV bodies get thinner, integrated speakers alone often cannot deliver the impact or channel separation enthusiasts expect. This is why premium soundbars, such as LG’s Immersive Suite 5 Pro in a 7.1.4-style configuration, are increasingly designed as extensions of flagship TVs rather than standalone accessories. Modern OLED TV soundbar integration typically supports HDMI eARC and passthrough for formats like Dolby Vision and advanced gaming features, ensuring that neither picture nor sound is compromised. When combined with AI-driven features like spatial hearing and room-aware audio processing, these soundbars can adapt to the acoustics of the space, reinforcing dialogue clarity while preserving surround effects. Paired with RGB Mini LED or laser TV projection displays, such systems deliver synchronized, cinema-like experiences that cover both vertical and horizontal sound fields, turning the living room into a cohesive audiovisual environment rather than a collection of separate devices.
The Future of Premium TV: Intelligent, Immersive Audio at the Core
The direction of premium TV development suggests that audio intelligence will be as central as panel technology in the years ahead. Spatial hearing AI technology shows that televisions can respond to voices with the nuance of a human listener, while laser TV projection platforms like Hisense’s Xplorer X1 Pro demonstrate that large-format displays can integrate sophisticated multi-channel sound without complex installation. At the same time, high-end soundbars close the gap between slim TV designs and the demands of immersive audio systems, creating a unified ecosystem. As RGB Mini LED, OLED, and laser projection advance, flagship TVs will increasingly be judged not just on peak brightness or color accuracy, but on how effectively they envelop viewers in three-dimensional sound, understand and respond to speech, and deliver a seamless home theater experience without the traditional tangle of separate components.
