3D displays showcased at Display Week 2025 and Computex 2025

Display Week 2025, held from May 11-16, 2025, at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center, and Computex 2025 held from May 20–23 in Taipei, Taiwan. 

Display Week 2025 emphasized a broader range of 3D technologies (e.g., holographic and stretchable displays), Computex 2025 focused more on practical, consumer-facing 3D solutions, especially in gaming monitors and PC components.

  • TCL CSOT (previously just TCL) showcased a curved giant 3D display (106 inch) that delivers a glasses-free 3D experience with a resolution of 5K by 2K. This large curved display enhances depth perception and immersion without the need for 3D glasses, using directional light field or lenticular lens technology to provide each eye with a unique image channel, creating the 3D effect. The curvature and size contribute to a more immersive viewing environment, suitable for home entertainment as well as commercial applications like digital signage and professional design review. This display is part of TCL CSOT’s advanced HVA (High-Voltage Amorphous) technology lineup, emphasizing high brightness, uniformity, and manufacturability for spatial displays.
  • Metavista3D presented a 27-inch holographic display with Super-Multiview (SMV) technology, offering thousands of perspectives in real-time. This display will provide clear 2d readability alongside immersive 3D capabilities.
  • Acer demoed its SpatialLabs monitor along with a library of hundreds of compatible games playable in 3D, also focusing on Spatial Audio, showcasing the awarded Hellblade game with 3D in both image & audio.
  • Samsung, added to the Odyssey 3D, they introduced yet another approach to glasses-free technology, a stretchable Micro-LED display capable of protruding in three dimensions, demonstrated with a 3D map concept where two areas of the display protrude simultaneously. This technology enables high-resolution screens to wrap around spherical surfaces, offering novel user experiences. But this is another concept, we still have to see if they improve their Odyssey 3D platform that just arrived to the market, to try to catch and stay on par with Acer SpatialLabs.
  • Tryx presented various super-cool cooling-solutions with integrated AMOLED display and also announced L-shaped screens to mimic a glasses-free 3D display. Panorama’s features its 6.5-inch AMOLED L-shaped screen that offers a “3D (anamorphic) visual experience” without the need for special glasses.
What you see here are two displays arranged in an L-shaped orientation, with a mirror positioned at the bottom
  • Although not in Computex, this week HP and Google unveiled again the videoconferencing system that allows maintaining eye-contact presented so long ago that we figured it was already rotting in Google’s infamous graveyard of half-baked, forgotten experiments.
    • Meanwhile, there’s still no update on the already-announced Samsung Android XR headset that was supposed to compete with the Apple Vision Pro—so don’t expect it this year. We need more competition beyond the Pico 4 Ultra, which remains the only real device offering almost the same Spatial Computing features (plus some new ones).
    • Not only that, Google has resurrected the 13-years-old Google Glass. Again. But worse. There’s no longer a 2d interface—there’s no visual interface at all. Just redundant text on the display, echoing the exact same words the voice is telling you. So basically, the glasses could work just fine without the pointless, expensive display—saving both battery and money. They might as well call it Google Glass v0.5. Unless you’re blind or planning to shop based on what others are wearing, asking ‘what am I looking at?’ is pretty pointless. Anyone today can do the exact same thing with most Android and iPhone devices—but it’s not something you need every day… or even every week.
Ooh!

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