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Samsung has a new breed of OBLYX OLED panels and they should appear on your gaming laptops soon

July 10, 2026
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Samsung Display has introduced OBLYX, its first dedicated OLED brand for gaming laptops, as the company looks to strengthen its position in one of the fastest-growing segments of the PC market. The announcement was made at Bilibili World 2026 (BW2026) in Shanghai, marking Samsung Display’s first appearance at China’s largest gaming and anime convention.

Rather than unveiling a new display technology, Samsung is creating a recognizable identity for its gaming-focused OLED panels, much like established branding for processors or graphics cards. The move also hints at the company’s ambitions in China, where demand for OLED-equipped gaming laptops is accelerating rapidly, according to a Digital Today report.

Samsung bets on branding as OLED gaming laptops go mainstream

At BW2026, Samsung Display showcased a wide range of devices – including smartphones, gaming laptops, and monitors – equipped with its OLED and QD-OLED panels. The centerpiece, however, was the debut of the OBLYX brand, which will represent Samsung’s premium OLED displays designed specifically for gaming notebooks.

Representative Image Unsplash

According to Samsung Display, the name OBLYX draws inspiration from obsidian, the volcanic glass known for its deep black appearance, reflecting OLED technology’s ability to deliver true blacks and virtually infinite contrast. The company plans to offer 14-inch, 16-inch, and 18-inch gaming laptop panels under the OBLYX lineup. These displays will support 120Hz, 165Hz, and 240Hz refresh rates, along with a 0.2ms response time, 100 percent DCI-P3 color gamut, and OLED’s signature infinite contrast ratio. Together, these specifications target gamers seeking smoother gameplay, faster response times, and improved visual fidelity in both competitive titles and cinematic games.

Samsung also built its exhibition booth around Tencent’s upcoming Honor of Kings: World, allowing visitors to compare OLED and LCD gaming experiences side by side and demonstrate the advantages of higher-end display technology.

China’s booming gaming market is driving Samsung’s latest strategy

The launch of OBLYX comes as OLED adoption continues to expand beyond premium monitors into gaming laptops. While several notebook manufacturers already offer OLED models, Samsung Display appears to be positioning its panels as a premium platform rather than simply another display component.

Representative Image
Unsplash

According to a report by Digital Today, China is central to that strategy. According to market research firm Omdia cited by Digital Today, China’s gaming OLED laptop market recorded a compound annual growth rate of 1,449 percent between 2023 and 2025, significantly outpacing the global growth rate of 405 percent. With an estimated 680 million gamers, China represents the world’s largest gaming market and one of the biggest opportunities for premium display technologies.

Samsung Display says it plans to strengthen partnerships with PC manufacturers across Greater China while engaging directly with gamers through events such as Bilibili World. Although consumers are unlikely to buy an “OBLYX laptop” directly, the branding could eventually become a recognizable quality marker, helping buyers identify notebooks equipped with Samsung’s latest gaming OLED panels. As gaming laptops increasingly compete on display quality alongside CPU and GPU performance, Samsung is betting that its panels deserve a brand of their own.

How is it different from Odyssey?

Samsung’s new OBLYX brand does not replace the Odyssey lineup. Instead, the two target different markets. Odyssey is a consumer-facing gaming monitor brand sold by Samsung Electronics, covering products like the Odyssey OLED G9.

OBLYX, meanwhile, is a component brand created by Samsung Display for the OLED panels used inside gaming laptops from multiple manufacturers, including ASUS, Lenovo, MSI, and others. By introducing OBLYX, Samsung hopes to establish its OLED panels as a recognizable mark of quality across brands, much like Intel Evo or Dolby Vision, rather than limiting the branding to Samsung-made hardware.

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