TCL has announced at MWC 2026 in Barcelona that its proprietary Nxtpaper eye-care display technology will integrate with AMOLED panels for the first time – marking a big upgrade for the tech.
Screen time across mobile devices continues to climb globally, and eye fatigue has become a measurable consequence, with display manufacturers increasingly competing on comfort metrics alongside traditional specifications like brightness and colour coverage.
Nxtpaper has historically appeared on LCD-based devices, where its paper-like visual approach found a niche among readers and users sensitive to harsh display output, making the move to AMOLED a significant expansion of the technology’s reach into mainstream smartphone territory.
The upgraded Circular Polariser Light technology raises the polarisation rate from 57% to 90%, a level TCL positions as industry-leading, with light emission characteristics that more closely resemble the behaviour of natural light during prolonged viewing sessions.
Harmful blue light output drops by a further 15% compared to Nxtpaper 4.0, reaching as low as 2.9%, while circadian screen comfort automatically adjusts brightness and colour temperature throughout the day to follow ambient daylight patterns.
In low-light conditions, a dim-light eye protection mode reduces screen brightness to as low as 1 nit, addressing a common concern among users who read or scroll on their phones in darkened environments before sleep.
Anti-glare and display performance
The new Nxtpaper AMOLED implementation also introduces what TCL describes as the first anti-glare technology applied to an AMOLED display in the smartphone industry, using nano-matrix lithography to reduce ambient reflections without degrading screen clarity.
An adaptive reading mode accompanies the hardware change, automatically adjusting background colour based on surrounding light conditions to maintain comfortable visuals across different environments throughout the day.
On raw display performance, the panel lists professional-grade colour accuracy of Delta E under 1, 100% P3 wide colour gamut coverage, a 3,200-nit peak brightness rating, and a 120Hz refresh rate, specifications that align with the upper tier of current flagship smartphone displays.
The technology draws on TCL’s vertically integrated display supply chain through TCL CSOT, which develops display panels across Mini LED, Micro LED, OLED, and inkjet printing OLED categories, giving the company direct engineering control over the component integration process.
TCL has not announced specific devices carrying the new NXTPAPER AMOLED technology, with further product and availability details expected to follow the MWC 2026 reveal.
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