Categories: Tech

This Jaw-Dropping, Foldable 137-Incher Is the Best TV You Can’t Afford

The C Seed N1, unfolded.

David Katzmaier/CNET

In my two decades as CNET’s TV reviewer, I have seen a lot of TVs — but nothing like this. C Seed makes incredibly expensive custom-built televisions for the ultra-wealthy, and the N1 is its latest offering. The 137-inch version I saw at CES 2024 is one of two N1 models in existence. 

The most incredible thing about the N1 is the way it folds into a compact rectangular chunk when not in use. Press a button and the screen divides into parts that slowly butterfly together, then descend into the rectangle, hiding the screen entirely — a process that takes about 2 and a half minutes. The folded N1 looks more like a solid metal bench than a TV. 

The N1, that silver rectangle in front of the window, looks nothing like a TV when it’s folded up.

C Seed

Unfolded, the N1 has a stunning, bright, seamless picture, and the screen can rotate 180 degrees. The divisions between the different sections of the screen were invisible to my eye. That’s because the company uses a proprietary system it calls Adaptive Gap Calibration. It automatically measures the distance between the edges, uses sensors to detect offsets and calibrates the brightness of adjacent LEDs. I couldn’t detect any seams in the image. 

The TV uses micro-LED technology, the same display tech found on Samsung’s The Wall — another massive, super-expensive TV that happens to be C Seed’s major competitor. C Seed says the massive 4K resolution screen can achieve 4,000 nits peak brightness, with HDR and wide color gamut. In my brief viewing time with C Seed’s demo material, the picture quality looked great. As with The Wall, I could discern individual pixels when I was very close to the screen, but from any normal seating distance, the image looked smooth and sharp.

Watch this: I Saw C-SEED’s $200,000 Folding TV 02:09

C Seed makes other huge folding TVs. The company rep told me C Seed has sold around 200 units in the 10 years it has been in business, each one custom-built. Clients typically wait six months between ordering and delivery. The 137-inch indoor N1 costs $200,000, a price that includes installation and setup, and the outdoor version is $240,000. If you’re so inclined, you can order a 165-inch ($300,000) or a 103-inch ($110,000) version instead. 

Normally, this is the part when I say I look forward to reviewing a TV in CNET’s lab — but in this case, that’s not gonna happen.

Share

Recent Posts

Australia boots Iranian diplomats after alleging Islamic Republic behind recent antisemitic attacks

close Video Australian nurses allegedly suspended after video shows threats to kill Israeli man Fox…

5 hours ago

Netanyahu announces investigation into ‘tragic mishap’ after reports of journalists killed in Gaza strike

close Video Israel launches heavy strikes on Gaza City as new offensive looms Fox News…

15 hours ago

US ally summons Trump ambassador over ‘unacceptable’ antisemitism allegations

close Video Fox News Flash top headlines for August 24 Fox News Flash top headlines…

19 hours ago

Russia says Ukrainian drones hit nuclear power plant during Independence Day strikes

close Video ‘DRONE WARFARE’: Special Ukraine envoy details the latest tool in conflict Special presidential…

1 day ago

Russian war hero ‘the Executioner’ allegedly ordered troops to shoot him in massive payout scheme: report

close Video Fox News Flash top headlines for August 24 Fox News Flash top headlines…

2 days ago

Russia looks to update nuclear program amid ‘colossal threats’ from West

close Video Russia strikes US factory in Ukraine Fox News senior strategic analyst Ret. Gen.…

2 days ago