
"The LCD panel features a 120 Hz refresh for smooth navigation, and black levels impressed me more than I expected from LCD. In fact, much of the color science resembled an OLED display. The tech that drives Nxtpaper's eye-soothing display adds extra layers on top, which can give content a subtle haze. The matte finish kills any reflections and most fingerprints, but also makes it somewhat difficult to view in direct sunlight."
"For eye comfort, two things stand out. First, the Nxtpaper technology is effective down to around 3.4% battery life according to TCL, a feature that doesn't require color tinting or software settings. Another important note is the total lack of pulse-width modulation to achieve its low brightness capability. This is great for anyone who suffers from headaches or strain from flickering displays. The panel can dim all the way down to two nits, which for me meant bedtime scrolling stayed peaceful even with the lights out."
TCL Nxtpaper 60 Ultra integrates Nxtpaper 4.0 into a 7.2-inch mid-range smartphone built for eye comfort rather than flagship speed. The LCD panel runs at 120 Hz and delivers black levels and color science closer to OLED than typical LCDs. Additional Nxtpaper layers create a subtle haze while a matte finish eliminates reflections and most fingerprints, but reduces readability in direct sunlight. Nxtpaper remains effective down to around 3.4% battery without color tinting or software tweaks. The panel uses no pulse-width modulation and can dim to two nits for low-light reading. A physical mode switch changes display behavior.
Read at ZDNET
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