TCL is extending its long-running partnership with Call of Duty to support the global rollout of Black Ops 7, highlighting its latest QD-Mini LED televisions for players in the UAE.
The brand is positioning the C8K, C7K and C6K ranges as large-screen options built for fast shooters, with high refresh rates, heavy local dimming and gaming-first features.
What TCL announced
TCL is back as the Official TV Partner for the Black Ops 7 launch, tying its QD-Mini LED lineup to the new game. The message is simple: bigger screens, higher brightness and faster panels for cleaner motion and better shadow detail.
- Official TV partner for the new Call of Duty title
- Focus on large screens and high refresh rates
- QD-Mini LED for brightness control and contrast
- UAE press note issued from Dubai on 15 November 2025
The partnership builds on years of work between TCL and Activision around the franchise, including creator events and feature tuning for big-screen play. The UAE announcement underlines that this tie-up isn’t just global marketing; it’s relevant to living rooms here. For more on the game itself, see our Black Ops 7 overview and updates. Read our Black Ops 7 guide.
C8K, C7K and C6K: the quick spec snapshot
TCL is pushing three QD-Mini LED series for Black Ops 7, each tuned for fast action with different levels of local dimming and peak brightness.
- C8K (65–98 inches)
- Up to 3,840 local dimming zones
- Peak brightness listed at roughly 4,500–5,000 nits (size dependent)
- 4K 144Hz panel with fast motion handling
- QLED colour, quoted at 97% DCI-P3 coverage
- C7K
- Up to 2,800 local dimming zones
- Peak brightness up to 3,000 nits
- 144Hz native refresh, AMD FreeSync Premium Pro, tuned Game Modes
- C6K
- 144Hz native refresh, VRR support, low input lag
- QD-Mini LED backlight with hundreds of zones aimed at cleaner dark-scene detail
In short, C8K is for maximum size and luminance, C7K lifts brightness and dimming depth at a lower tier, and C6K focuses on speed and responsiveness. The zone counts and brightness claims target halo control and pop, which helps in dark maps and bright flashes alike.
Game Master and motion tech
All three lines include TCL’s Game Master suite. It’s there to shave latency, stabilise variable refresh and give you a simple on-screen panel for quick tweaks mid-match. Shadow tools aim to pull detail out of darker areas without blowing out highlights.
- Auto low-latency behaviour for supported signals
- VRR and FreeSync management
- On-screen game dashboard for real-time settings
- Shadow enhancement for visibility in dark scenes
The goal is consistency. Competitive shooters punish motion blur, frame pacing hiccups and muddy blacks. TCL’s approach leans on high refresh, zone control and quick toggles so you can adapt the picture to different maps or modes without diving deep into menus.
Why big screens matter for Black Ops 7
Call of Duty is built for fast scanning, target tracking and quick reads of HUD elements. TCL’s pitch is that big canvases plus precise local dimming help you spot movement and manage recoil and visibility during chaotic firefights.
- Large formats help with spatial awareness
- High brightness supports HDR highlights from explosions and lighting
- Strong zone control reduces blooming in high-contrast scenes
- Wide viewing angles keep colour and luminance stable off-centre
If you’re following multiplayer tuning and map counts, we’re tracking those details too. Catch the multiplayer breakdown here.
For players planning their first session, here’s our piece on Game Pass timing and November drops. See the Game Pass schedule.
FAQ
What is QD-Mini LED in plain English?
Which TCL models are tied to the Black Ops 7 push?
Do these TVs support high refresh rates?
Are UAE prices and sizes confirmed?
What is TCL’s Game Master?
Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest updates and news
Member discussion