There’s a moment in the leaked Avengers: Doomsday script that changes everything.
Shuri spots multiverse anomalies. Doom kidnaps Franklin Richards. Loki teams up with TVA.
It’s not just another Marvel film.
It’s a chaotic event unfolding at 144 frames per second.
And that’s exactly the problem.
You can’t flatten multiverse madness into 60Hz.
The human eye sees around 120–150 frames per second. And yet, most TVs stop at 60.
That’s fine when you’re rewatching Iron Man 1 or bingeing old seasons of Loki. But not when you’re watching Earth-616 collapse into a parallel timeline while Doctor Doom and Kang fight over causality.
This isn’t just storytelling. It’s visual warfare.
Every blink costs you a moment. Every frame drop steals tension.
It’s like watching Endgame on a flipbook.
Here’s what makes Doomsday different – and what your screen needs to match it
The Avengers aren’t just assembling.
They’re colliding.
Fantastic Four. X-Men. New Avengers. Thunderbolts.
All on the same frame. All moving at different speeds, from different dimensions.
You’re not just watching a film.
You’re decoding visual entropy.
And to make sense of that chaos, your display needs:
- 144Hz Refresh Rate – to keep up with multiverse-level motion
- Dolby Vision IQ – to adjust light, shadow, and contrast as the scene shifts realities
- OLED Pixel Dimming – because Doctor Doom in a shadowy lab should feel different from Thor in cosmic lightning
- MEMC 120Hz + FreeSync Premium – to eliminate stutter when Sam and Monica burst through a dimensional gateway mid-battle
The OLED 165cm TV doesn’t just show you Doomsday. It syncs with it.

It’s the kind of screen that respects what Marvel built frame by frame.
- 144Hz-like motion clarity through MEMC 120Hz engine
- OLED blacks so deep, the TVA’s void actually feels like a void
- Dolby Vision IQ + HDR10+, so color grading stays true in every lighting from Wakanda to space-time breaches
- 2.1 Channel 50W sound with Dolby Atmos, placing each superhero’s line exactly where it should be around you
- AMD FreeSync Premium, just in case you want to plug in your console and play the multiverse too
It’s not just a television. It’s a frame-accurate portal into cinematic complexity.
So, what’s the real issue here?

It’s not whether Avengers: Doomsday will be epic.
It’s whether your screen will let you experience it fully.
Here are your options:
- Option 1: Watch it on a basic LED panel. Miss the flicker in Monica’s dimension jump. Wonder why it felt off.
- Option 2: Go OLED but cap your refresh rate. Crisp visuals, but not quick enough when three teams clash across timelines.
- Option 3: Get the OLED 65″ with Dolby Vision IQ and MEMC 120Hz. Let the film breathe at the speed it was meant to.
This isn’t about screen specs. It’s about respecting the narrative
The multiverse isn’t a gimmick. It’s a storytelling frontier.
And every detail Shuri’s holograms, Doom’s shadows, Thor’s bifrost demands fidelity.
Speed. Clarity. Depth.
Haier’s OLED screen gives that to you. Without compromise.
If the Avengers are giving it everything in 2026, shouldn’t your screen keep up?
Because anything less than 144Hz isn’t the multiverse. It’s just fan theory.