
Overview
- Samsung is using CES 2026 to push a full home audio ecosystem, headlined by its new Music Studio Wi-Fi speakers and refreshed Q-Series soundbars that are tuned to work as one system rather than standalone boxes.
- The sculptural Music Studio 5 and Music Studio 7, designed with Erwan Bouroullec, turn speakers into decor. The smaller Studio 5 hides a 4-inch woofer and dual tweeters behind a gallery-inspired form, while the Studio 7 adds a 3.1.1-channel spatial array with a super tweeter reaching up to 35kHz.
- Both Music Studio models lean on AI Dynamic Bass Control, Samsung Audio Lab tuning and Wi-Fi/Bluetooth casting, so they can sit solo as design pieces or lock in with compatible TVs and soundbars via Q-Symphony for wider stereo or full surround.
- On the home theater side, the flagship HW-Q990H steps up as an 11.1.4-channel Dolby Atmos monster with new Sound Elevation and Auto Volume tools that aim to lift dialogue to the center of the screen and smooth out level jumps.
- The new HW-QS90H All-in-One Soundbar chases cleaner interiors with a built-in Quad Bass Woofer, 13 drivers and a Convertible Fit chassis that flips between wall and tabletop while a gyro sensor auto-adjusts the channel map.
- Underpinning the whole drop is an upgraded Q-Symphony platform that lets up to five Samsung sound devices and a TV fire in sync, with the system analyzing room layout so dialogue stays clearer and spatial effects hit harder.
- Samsung is framing the 2026 range as the next evolution of its 11-year soundbar run, promising “rich, expressive performance for any space and moment”.
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