
QuantumBlack is the branding for a film that the company is applying at the factory for every QD-OLED panel produced. That means new QD-OLED monitors from other vendors will also come with it as long as the monitor is a 2026 model. For instance, Asus calls it "BlackShield Film," AOC has labeled it "DarkShield 3.0," MSI named it "Dark Armor," and Gigabyte chose "Obsidian Shield."
Nomenclature aside, Samsung says the QuantumBlack film reduces light reflections by 20% compared to previous-gen products, while improving black depth under ambient light. The company didn't provide specific numbers for how much more contrast these new panels can retain, but there are plenty of hands-on videos on YouTube — the difference is definitely noticeable, and the monitors do look darker.
You may like Vertical stripe subpixel layout finally comes to QD-OLED as Samsung reveals new flagship 34-inch panel Samsung's brand-new QD-OLED tech can double the panel's lifespan MSI's fifth-generation QD-OLED gaming monitor embraces RGB stripe subpixels The black level raise issue is exclusive to QD-OLED due to a lack of a polarizer in the OLED stack. Samsung Display chose to do this to preserve brightness and color depth, but it comes with its side effects. The light hitting the panel reflects more than it would on WOLED, and mixes with the pixels that are turned off (black pixels) to make the panel look washed out. You see a purple/magenta tint because QD-OLED uses a blue layer as its base.
Apart from countering black level raise, the new QuantumBlack coating also improves the surface hardness from 2H to 3H for better durability. QD-OLED panels are known to be exceptionally prone to (micro)scratches; you'll find thousands of Reddit threads disagreeing over how to clean one of these displays, so, it's nice to see Samsung Display make strides in this department. The company even claims the coating is resistant to fingernail scratches.
With every new OLED monitor generation, we usually look for more major upgrades like the new RGB striped layouts from both LG and Samsung , but small changes like a better screen coating can add up to big differences.
Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News , or add us as a preferred source , to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.
Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Key considerations
- Investor positioning can change fast
- Volatility remains possible near catalysts
- Macro rates and liquidity can dominate flows
Reference reading
- https://www.tomshardware.com/monitors/SPONSORED_LINK_URL
- https://www.tomshardware.com/monitors/samsung-display-debuts-quantumblack-coating-for-qd-oled-monitors-screen-tech-boosts-ambient-black-levels-while-reducing-glare#main
- https://www.tomshardware.com/subscription
- Exceptional fake SSD clone of Samsung 990 Pro is almost impossible to spot — near-identical performance blurs the line between real and fake as AI crunch drives
- Russian ‘Starlink Rival’ established with 16 satellites launched, aims for 900 by 2035 — commercial operation to begin next year with 250 sputniks
- HP Omen Max 45L review: Flagship desktop gaming PC performance with a price tag to match
- Intel's upcoming 'Wildcat Lake' low-power series breaks cover in Geekbench listing — 'Core 3 304' is twice as fast in single-core performance versus last-gen
- Samsung’s 870 EVO SATA SSD quietly gets 8TB variant despite storage shortage and skyrocketing pricing — new model spotted in Europe for €1,300 with higher cache
Informational only. No financial advice. Do your own research.