Samsung’s Frame series of TVs is one of the best solutions available to help your giant display blend more seamlessly into your home. At CES 2025, the company is expanding its lineup of Frame Pro, a more advanced version of its TVs featuring Samsung’s top-of-the-line Neo QLED panels. The problem is, we still don’t know if Samsung is using a 4K or 8K panel here. This choice will have a big impact on the price of the Frame Pro when it eventually goes on sale (Samsung has not yet revealed the price or release date, in true CES fashion).
In addition to the panel, the Frame Pro also uses Samsung’s Wireless One Connect box. This allows you to send content from your console or set-top box to your TV without a direct connection. Instead, when connected to Wireless One Connect, the video is sent to your TV. This means you can have a cleaner, cable-free setup, which feels especially useful with sets like frames.
It also uses Samsung’s NQ4 Gen3 AI processor. This is a second-generation update that Samsung used on some sets last year. As always, we don’t know exactly how this will affect the set, but given the number of pixels modern TVs have to push, annual updates make sense. NQ4 also hints that this may be a 4K panel rather than an 8K panel, as Samsung’s just-announced Neo QLED 8K QN990F TV uses the NQ8 processor. Perhaps the 4 or 8 refers to your TV’s resolution. In any case, we’ll know more soon.
If you’ve never seen a frame before, it’s a TV that’s meant to be mounted on a wall, with a frame that’s more reminiscent of something you’d find in an art gallery than a media room. When turned off, you can choose whether to display fine art images from Samsung’s curated collection. The screen itself has a matte anti-glare coating that makes it feel like you have another large TV attached to it. On the wall.
As usual, Samsung is holding a CES showcase tonight where you can get a first-hand look at the Frame Pro and other new Samsung TVs. We’ll update this post when we learn more about Frame Pro.
