Written by: Jin Fujisaki / Published: 2026-02-17
The "Wallpaper OLED" — once unleashed by LG and stunning the world with its impossible thinness — is back, now equipped with fully wireless technology. The panel is just 0.9mm thick, slimmer than a credit card. Simply attached to the wall with a magnetic mat, it looks as if the image itself is floating in mid-air. No heavy wall-mount brackets, no large-scale reinforcement work. With the same ease as putting up a poster, you can create a 77-to-97-inch "moving window" in your living room.
There are no "bezels" or "rear protrusions" found on conventional TVs. Even viewed from the side, it looks like nothing more than wallpaper lifted slightly off the surface. It's the pinnacle of industrial design — updating the very concept of "placing a TV" into the act of "pasting an image."
| No more "black box." Cable-free Zero Connect

image Hypebeast
The biggest feature of this TV is that there are no HDMI cables or antenna lines extending from the panel (※except for an ultra-thin power supply). Video and audio are transmitted uncompressed at 4K/144Hz from a separate "Zero Connect Box." All peripherals — your PS6, Blu-ray recorder, and so on — connect to this box instead.
The box can be placed anywhere in the room. Tuck it beside the sofa or hide it inside a cabinet, and all that remains on the wall is a pure "OLED sheet." The struggles of drilling holes in walls or routing cable molding to hide wires are now a thing of the past. Your interior design freedom improves dramatically.
| Brightness exceeding 3000 nits. MLA technology surpasses the "window"
image BigGo
Despite its ultra-thin panel, it's equipped with the latest "META Technology 3.0 (Micro Lens Array)." Billions of microscopic lenses amplify the light, completely overcoming the "darkness" that was a longstanding weakness of OLED. Peak brightness exceeds 3000 nits, rendering dazzling whites and pitch-black blacks in striking contrast.
Even in a living room flooded with midday sunlight, there's no need to draw the curtains. A brightness that doesn't lose to sunlight reveals every detail of the image with crisp clarity. Too thin to fit speakers? Not quite — thanks to "Crystal Sound" technology, which produces sound by vibrating the screen itself, voices feel as though they're emerging from within the image, delivering remarkable presence.
| When off, it becomes "wallpaper." The evolution of Chameleon Mode

image Abt.com
When you're not watching TV, that giant black rectangle has always been a source of visual noise in your interior. With the W6, you can snap a photo of your wall with your smartphone, and the screen will reproduce the texture and color to blend seamlessly into the background. Or activate "Gallery Mode" to display masterpieces by Van Gogh or Monet, transforming your space into something resembling an art museum.
Standby power consumption has been minimized to the extreme, so even leaving it on permanently as a digital art frame won't make you worry about your electricity bill. "Beautiful even when you're not watching it." That's the only condition under which something can earn the right to be the centerpiece of your living room.
| Summary: Buying "space" for one million yen
image mikeshouts
Prices start at around one million yen for the 77-inch model. Outrageously expensive, yes — but this isn't merely an expense for a TV. It should be thought of as a renovation cost: the price of obtaining the highest-quality entertainment without compromising the beauty of your room.
Throw out your TV stand and turn an entire wall into imagery. The LG W6 is a magical sheet that erases the noise of "everyday living" from your home. So — is your wall ready?


