Skip to content

Samsung's new displays to eliminate screen door effect in VR

OLED screens with 10,000 pixels per inch? Samsung and Stanford University are ready to push that V so much closer to the R.

Hope Corrigan
Hope Corrigan
1 min read
Samsung's new displays to eliminate screen door effect in VR

Virtual Reality is the fun tech of the future that inches ever closer to dropping the V to look more like the R.

According to Engadget, these new screens developed by Samsung and Standford University might be one of the next big steps in this progression, by eliminating the screen door effect.

For those yet to step into the virtual world, wearing a VR headset is a less than perfect experience. They can be a bit bulky and awkward as they look to wear, but that’s slowly getting better. When you’re actually in the headset, most people’s biggest complaint is that it can be like looking through a fine mesh or screen door.

This is due to the gaps between the pixels. When they’re as close to your face as a VR screen is, you notice them. For some this makes motion sickness or headaches more of an issue, and for others it’s just a bit of a marr on the immersive experience.

Either way, it’s definitely something worth fixing to bring VR into the future.

The way Samsung and Stanford University are combating this is with their newly developed OLED technology supporting 10,000 pixels per inch. Most headsets on the market today have screens around the 500 ppi field with some going as high as around 1000 ppi.

This means the gaps between pixels will likely get even smaller but that’s not all to this new tech.

It does even more to get rid of the screen door effect by having reflective layers made with nano-sized corrugations. This film is how they can get such high pixel densities without having to limit the brightness.

The design works for large scale manufacturing and Samsung is already reportedly working on some full sized displays with this tech, so the future may not be as far as we think. That is as long as the PCs are powerful enough to support such high resolutions.

But this combined with other cool tech like the Virtuix Omni One VR treadmill means I’m hoping to ditch regular reality as soon as possible.

New RealitiesGamesTechnologySamsung

Hope Corrigan

Secretly several dogs stacked on top of one another in a large coat, Hope has a habit of getting far too excited about all things videogames and tech. She loves the new accomplishments and ideas huma


Related Posts

Paleblue lets you keep traditional batteries charged on the go

Just when you thought traditional batteries were dead, here comes Paleblue with a full range of classic cells that recharge over USB.

Four AA batteries being charged on USB via a laptop USB port.

VR helping astronauts to stay healthy on the International Space Station

Here's a great use of VR – in space! The HTC Vive Focus 3 is being used to help astronauts with both physical and mental health efforts. With the highly confined quarters on the ISS, astronauts are now using VR to experience more expansive environments back on Earth as

Microsoft Flight Simulator gets a Dune expansion

There are a lot of games getting totally carried away with IP tie-ins. There's plenty I like, there's plenty more that are real head scratchers on why they exist. One of the best I've ever seen has to be this new update for Microsoft