Samsung’s “QuantumView” Verification Shows Why Its QD-OLED Displays Are The Best In The World Hassan Mujtaba • at EDT Add on Google Samsung verifies its QD-OLED display lineup successfully in the QuantumView verification program, showcasing why its displays are the best. Samsung's QD-OLED Displays Receive Superior "QuantumView" Viewing Angle Performance Press Release: Samsung Display announced today that its QD-OLED panels for TVs and monitors have received verification from UL Solutions, a global leader in applied safety science, for their viewing angle performance under the ‘QuantumView™’ standard. Related Story MSI Pushes 128 GB DDR5 to 9400 MT/s on X870E Unify-X MAX, Hints Bigger Gains With Next-Gen Ryzen‘QuantumView’ is a verification program that evaluates changes in luminance and color coordinates as the viewing angle shifts from the front in 10-degree increments up to 60 degrees. According to the assessment results, Samsung Display’s QD-OLED panels maintained above 60% of front-facing luminance even at a 60-degree angle, while color shift remained below 0.012, indicating minimal change. In comparison, LCD panels are known to experience luminance degradation to below 20% at 60 degrees, with color shift recorded at a maximum of 0.025, approximately twice the level observed in QD-OLED. A Samsung Display official explained that viewing angles have long been a key factor in TV selection due to shared viewing environments in living rooms and the preference for larger screens. As usage patterns continue to evolve, with increasing adoption of dual and triple monitor setups as well as professional reference displays where multiple users view the same screen simultaneously, demand for wide viewing angle QD-OLED monitors is also growing. According to the company, the superior viewing angle performance of QD-OLED is enabled by its proprietary front emission structure and the inherent optical characteristics of quantum dots. While light typically exhibits directional properties that can cause variations in brightness and color depending on the viewing angle, quantum dots exhibit a ‘Lambertian-like’ emission pattern, emitting light evenly in all directions. In QD-OLED, quantum dots absorb blue OLED light and re-emit it in red and green wavelengths. During this process, the nanometer-scale quantum dot particles not only convert color but also emit light in a spherical pattern, forming a Lambertian-like emission distribution. In addition, unlike other large OLED technologies, QD-OLED generates pure and vivid colors directly from the front surface, enabling both high color accuracy and optical efficiency. Building on its strong viewing angle and color reproduction characteristics, Samsung Display is expanding its OLED monitor business beyond the gaming-focused B2C segment into B2B markets with high demand for precision displays, including video production, graphic design, content creation, and financial trading. Recently, ASUS and Dell Technologies launched professional creator monitors equipped with QD-OLED, including the ProArt and UltraSharp series, respectively, which have received positive responses in the market. Other manufacturers such as Acer, Lenovo, and MSI are also planning to introduce professional monitor lineups featuring QD-OLED. About the : A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as 's for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking. Follow on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds. Further Reading ASUS Quietly Drops the ProArt PA32USD, a 4K QD-OLED With DP 2.1 and Thunderbolt 4 That Targets Creators First PC OEMs, Like ASUS & MSI, Are Rumored To Make Their Own “Project Helix” Machines, But That Doesn’t Mean Xbox Consoles Won’t Exist New HUDIMM DDR5 Standard Promises Cheaper Memory, But Testing Shows It Slashes Bandwidth in Half MSI’s New 32″ QD-OLED Gaming Monitors Kill the Purple Tint Problem, Boost Black Levels by 40% & Prevent OLED Burn-In Read all on Samsung’s “QuantumView” Verification Shows Why Its QD-OLED Displays Are The Best In The World

Samsung QD-OLED: A New Standard for Display Performance