Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

LG’s giant 97-inch M3 OLED TV eliminates HDMI cables

Wall-mounting a TV is no picnic, especially when that TV measures 97 diagonal inches. But LG’s new Signature OLED M Series TV could make that task much easier. The giant, 4K OLED TV uses LG’s Zero Connect wireless technology to effectively eliminate the need for any AV cabling from AV receivers, set-top boxes, soundbars, or game consoles to the TV. As long as the OLED M3 has power, it doesn’t need any other wires. LG is showing the M3 for the first time at CES 2023 but hasn’t offered any details on price or availability.

The M3’s wireless connection is powered by the included Zero Connect box — a cheekily-named gadget that is essentially the same device as Samsung’s One Connect box, except that the Zero Connect box uses a fully wireless connection to the M3 instead of Samsung’s thin umbilical cord. One, Zero … you get the idea. LG says the new box will have “multiple” ports for connecting devices, though it hasn’t said how many and what kind.

LG 97-inch Signature OLED M3 4K TV and Zero Connect box.
LG 97-inch Signature OLED M3 4K TV and Zero Connect box. LG

As such, any AV device you want to use with the M3, from gaming consoles to streaming media players, plugs into the Zero Connect box, which then relays the audio and video signals wirelessly to the M3. LG says you’ll be able to send up to 4K video at 120Hz, a critical spec for those who plan to use the M3 for gaming. The whole show can be controlled via voice commands, but LG hasn’t indicated if the M3 will support third-party AI systems like Google Assistant and Amazon Alexa, or if it will be limited to LG’s own voice system.

Recommended Videos

When wall-mounted, the M3 will be effectively flush to the wall thanks to LG’s new One Wall Design, a feature it shares with LG’s new G3 OLED evo TV. One Wall Design presents no visible gap between the TV and the wall, according to the company.

Many companies in the AV tech space have been playing with ways to send audio and video wirelessly to TVs, and there’s no shortage of ways to do this with a normal TV, but this is the first time we’ve seen a TV manufacturer put all of its connection eggs in the wireless basket. This historical reluctance has likely been due to the nature of wireless signals — they tend to be highly susceptible to various kinds of interference — and the desire to avoid angry customers who can’t get reliable pictures and sound.

Man playing a video game on an LG 97-inch Signature OLED M3 4K TV.
LG

LG’s faith in Zero Connect’s ability to overcome these challenges stems from its research and development efforts. It says that it has developed an algorithm that “instantly identifies the optimal transmission path.” At the same time, LG claims the algorithm can recognize changes in the immediate environment – such as people or pets moving around the room – and switch its transmission path accordingly.

Still, there’s only so much an algorithm can do, and LG seems to acknowledge that M3 buyers may need to do some tweaking to get the system to perform the way it should: the box’s antenna can be rotated and/or tilted to better align with the TV’s location. In the provided photos, the Zero Connect box looks like it has a very clear — and very short — line of sight to the M3, which suggests that buyers will have to be very careful when choosing a location for the box.

If 97 inches is too big for your space (or wallet), the M3 OLED will also be available in 83- and 77-inch sizes. As soon as we get the full specs on the M3, we’ll let you know. But the big question — can the M3 deliver a truly reliable and lossless wireless stream of multichannel audio and 4K video from a box to the TV? — we likely won’t know for sure until we get one in for testing.

Simon Cohen
Simon Cohen is a contributing editor to Digital Trends' Audio/Video section, where he obsesses over the latest wireless…
LG’s 2024 OLED M4 takes AI processing to new heights ahead of CES
The 2024 LG OLED M4 television seen in a press image.

The 2024 LG OLED M4 sports an even better processor and faster refresh rates — all while doing so wirelessly. LG

With its new QNED televisions and accompanying range of new soundbars having already made their pre-CES appearances, LG now turns to the big guns — its 2024 OLED TV lineup. Basically, just take what made its 2023 models so great and add some more superlatives: Bigger (or smaller, actually, but we’ll get to that.) Brighter. Faster. More powerful.

Read more
LG’s DukeBox concept marries a tube amp with a transparent OLED display
The DukeBox by LG Labs.

What happens when you take a tube amp, a multispeaker sound system, and a transparent OLED display and mash them together? You may end up with something resembling the DukeBox, a new hybrid device concept from LG Labs that will be on display at CES 2024.

LG Labs is a "marketing platform focused on delivering experimental yet innovative products and services," according to LG, so it's not entirely clear if the DukeBox is something LG intends to bring to market or simply a way of creatively showcasing what can be done with the company's transparent OLED display technology. No pricing or availability has been released so far.

Read more
LG’s 2024 QNED TV lineup leans in to AI across the board, at up to 98 inches
A press image of one of LG's 2024 QNED televisions.

Having already announced its upcoming soundbar lineup, LG now turns to its 2024 QNED flavor of televisions. And while we don't yet know pricing or availability in the U.S. — that'll come later — we do know the active ingredient behind the sets that continue to combine quantum dots with NanoCell technology in a space that sits just below LG's OLED TVs.

And as you suspect by now, that active ingredient is AI.

Read more