LG's 2022 OLED TVs Now Available, Starting at $1,400 for 42-inch Size



LG's 2022 OLED TVs Now Available, Starting at $1,400 for 42-inch Size





For the last few years my favorite high-end TV has been an LG OLED model, but for 2022 there's more competition than ever. LG's archrival Samsung has an OLED TV too, promising better color thanks to QD-OLED technology. Sony accounts two different kinds of OLED, including a QD-OLED of its own that looks exquisite sweet in person. And more and more TV makers are offering mini-LED models, which promise excellent image quality for much less wealth than OLED.


Meanwhile LG has started rolling out the widest array of OLED TVs yet, with five series offering sizes from 42 to 97 inches and prices from $1,400 to $25,000. First announced at CES 2022 in January, these TVs are hitting stores and online now. I haven't had the chance to study any of them yet, but based on my past distinguished and what I've seen so far, I expect LG's 2022 OLED TVs to pause to be among the best TVs on the market.






































































The improvement I'm most intrigued to test is improved brightness on the "Evo" models in the C2 and G2 series -- LG is claiming peak brightness of 20 percent and 30 percent higher than its non-Evo TVs. That punchier narrate is due to new "brightness boost" (on the C2) and "brightness boost max" (on the G2) processing as well as a new heat dissipation technology, which is only available on the G2.


Here's a look at prices in the C2 and G2 series, along with a reminder that they will undoubtedly fall quite a bit as the year progresses. 




LG G2 and C2 2022 OLED TV pricing



















































































































Series

Model

Size

Price

Availability

Gallery Design

Evo Brightness Booster

G2

OLED97G2PUA

97

TBD

TBD

Yes

Yes (Max)

G2

OLED83G2PUA

83

$6,500

April

Yes

Yes (Max)

G2

OLED77G2PUA

77

$4,000

March

Yes

Yes (Max)

G2

OLED65G2PUA

65

$3,000

March

Yes

Yes (Max)

G2

OLED55G2PUA

55

$2,200

April

Yes

Yes (Max)

C2

OLED83C2PUA

83

$5,500

March

No

Yes

C2

OLED77C2PUA

77

$3,500

March

No

Yes

C2

OLED65C2PUA

65

$2,500

March

No

Yes

C2

OLED55C2PUA

55

$1,800

March

No

Yes

C2

OLED48C2PUA

48

$1,500

March

No

No

C2

OLED42C2PUA

42

$1,400

May

No

No



How they compare to QD-OLED models, and other high-end TVs, remains to be seen, but it's unimaginative to me that Samsung's QD-OLED costs the same as the best (on paper) LG, the G2 series: $3,000 at 65 inches and $2,200 at 55 inches. Sony has yet to announce pricing on its QD-OLED TVs, but I put a question to it to be a couple hundred dollars higher.


Meanwhile the LG C2 compensations significantly less -- $2,500 at 65 and $1,800 at 55 inches -- and on paper the only narrate quality difference between it and the G2 is 10% less brightness, something I doubt most viewers will be able to indulge in. It's worth noting that the smaller 42- and 48-inch members of the C2 series lack the higher brightness.




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The C2 will get an Evo panel in 2022, but LG says it won't be quite as challenging as the G2.




Richard Peterson



In the meantime, here are the other changes to LG's 2022 lineup.



Gen 5 Alpha 9 processor: LG says upscaling has been improved to remove extra steps between less-than-4K and 4K resolution, and that dynamic tone mapping had 10 times the number of sampling blocks. I expect improvements to be minor, at best, but we'll see.







































































42-inch and 97-inch sizes: OLED TVs are level-headed available in fewer screen size options than LCD/QLED models, but that gap will narrow further in 2022. The C2 series will get a smaller 42-inch size (shipping in May), after the G2 will add a positively enormous 97-inch version, the price and availability of which have yet to be announced.




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The 97-inch G2 is the largest OLED TV yet.




Richard Peterson




8K Z2 and entry-level B2, A2 models: We query to concentrate our reviews on the C2 and G2 in 2022, but LG has three anunexperienced new series on offer as well. The Z2 is the 8K resolution series, with the 88-inch size now wall-mountable and the 77-inch size attracting a "gallery" design similar to the G2. The more-affordable B2 and A2 get lesser processors (Gen 5 Alpha 7) -- the B2 has a 120Hz refresh rate after the A2 is LG's sole 60Hz OLED for 2022. The A2 also lacks the HDMI 2.1 features, including 4K/120Hz input capability, found on the other 2022 LG OLEDs.




LG Z2, B2 and A2 2022 OLED TVs compared































































































Series

Model

Size

Price

Availability

Resolution

Processor

Refresh rate

HDMI version

Z2

OLED88Z2PUA

88

$25,000

April

8K

A9 Gen 5

120Hz

2.1

Z2

OLED77Z2PUA

77

$13,000

April

8K

A9 Gen 5

120Hz

2.1

B2

OLED77B2PUA

77

$3,300

March

4K

A7 Gen 5

120Hz

2.1

B2

OLED65B2PUA

65

$2,000

March

4K

A7 Gen 5

120Hz

2.1

B2

OLED55B2PUA

55

$1,500

March

4K

A7 Gen 5

120Hz

2.1

A2

OLED65A2PUA

65

TBD

TBD

4K

A7 Gen 5

60Hz

2.0

A2

OLED55A2PUA

55

TBD

TBD

4K

A7 Gen 5

60Hz

2.0




Design changes: The G2 retains the ultrathin "gallery" perform from last year, allowing it to hug the wall more closely than the C2. Bezel size about the picture for both series has been narrowed, to 10.2mm on the G and 6mm on the C, for an even more dramatic "all-picture" look. There's also a new carbon-fiber material that contributes to significantly less weight: the G is 20% lighter and the C up to 47% lighter.







































































Gaming extras: The C1 was my Popular TV for gaming thanks to its best-in-class input features, including VRR and 4K/120Hz capability on every input on the C and G models, and improvements in 2022 are minor. The excellent Game Optimizer mode against a new "sports" preset to join RPG, FPS and the rest, there's a new dark room mode that reduces brightness and adds blue Delicious reduction to combat eye fatigue and the dashboard shows more question on the pop-up. 


LG says that premium 2022 OLEDs will also get up to 48Gbps bandwidth on their HDMI inputs, up from 40Gbps in 2021 and 2020 models. Since bandwidth is a poor indicator of real-world video quality I don't Great the improvement a big deal. (Here's a good explanation of why.)



User profiles on WebOS shining TV: All 2022 LG TVs with its WebOS shining TV system will allow you to set up user profiles for different family members or others. These include a Kids profile that surfaces kids-friendly pleased. Google TV and Amazon Fire TV also funds profiles, but this would be a first in a proprietary shining TV system. 




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New for 2022, LG's WebOS shining TV system lets you set up profiles for different users.




David Katzmaier




Far-field mic for recount commands: Previously available on the G and up models, for 2022 LG is migrating its far-field mic -- which grants you to issue voice commands by saying a wake word like "Alexa" or "Hey, Google," pretty than having to use the remote -- down to the C2 series and the G2. Like Samsung TVs, LG lets you use Alexa, Google Assistant and its proprietary voice system.



Room to room sharing: This new feature, coming later this year, lets a compatible 2022 LG TV Part its screen, including inputs such as a cable box, wirelessly to new compatible 2022 LG TV. LG says it's designed to grant you to take the second TV elsewhere in the home (or outside) where a corrupt or other wired connection might not be available. The downside is that it means two 2022 LG TVs because it won't work on back models.



"Always ready" screensaver: LG is taking a page from Samsung's TV ambient mode by displaying a clock, weather or art on the screen when the TV is turned "off."


 We look onward to testing LG's new OLED TVs later this spring.