Make any TV wireless and battery powered with this add-on that also means you can wall-mount anywhere instantly without drilling
What place can have a wireless wall-mounted TV without doing any DIY? Displace!
- Suction mount for TVs 50" to 100" and up to 150lbs
- 5 to 10 hours of battery life depending on the TV
- $1,900, release date TBC
Fancy turning your existing TV into a fully wireless, battery-powered one on the wall? The new Displace Hub does just that.
Designed for TVs weighing up to 150lbs and for sizes from 50 to 100 inches, the Displace Hub attaches to the wall via four large suction cups and features a 15,000mAh battery pack capable of powering your TV for between 5 and 10 hours. You can watch TV while charging that battery, but of course that means running a charging cable to it, like some kind of yokel.
This isn't just a way to hide your TV's cables or wall mount it without drilling holes, as handy as it is. The Displace Hub also includes a computer, and can be part of a two-screen system with your TV as the main display and a smaller device providing extra content.
Displace Hub: key features and specifications
The Displace Hub uses the same suction setup as the brand's Displace TV, a wireless, wall-mounted TV launched in 2023. That TV is only available in one size (although you can combine multiple screens together), whereas the Hub enables you to get the same fitting and optional dual-screen functionality for any of the best TVs.
The Hub includes an integrated PC running the Intel N-150 quad-core CPU with 16GB of RAM, 128GB of storage and an integrated graphics processor. That runs Displace's operating system, and it has twin HDMI inputs for external devices. It's designed to work with Displace's Controller 2.0, which uses an additional screen to deliver related information and content. That information and content is served up by AI software.
Displace is very into AI this year. It'll also be showing its Displace Pro TV 2 with AI-enabled functionality, some of which sounds useful – for example, creating a personalized video news feed based on content from your favorite online sources; gesture control; and live conversational search – and some of it less so, such as "pause to shop", where your screen will "surface relevant products from the scene" when you pause a show or movie.
The Displace Hub will have a launch price of $1,900, which of course is more than you'd pay even for most of the best OLED TVs, depending on size. But if you really want a wall-mounted TV and can't for practical/landlord reasons, or you want to be able to move your TV around to work anywhere, or if you're intrigued by the option of having an AI-powered second screen, it's an interesting option.
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The Displace Hub will be showcased at CES 2026. A release date hasn't yet been announced.

➡️ Read our full guide to the best TVs
1. Best overall:
LG C5
2. Best under 1000:
US: Hisense U8QG
UK: TCL C7K
3. Best under 500:
US: Roku Plus Series
UK: TCL C6K
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Contributor
Writer, broadcaster, musician and kitchen gadget obsessive Carrie Marshall has been writing about tech since 1998, contributing sage advice and odd opinions to all kinds of magazines and websites as well as writing more than twenty books. Her latest, a love letter to music titled Small Town Joy, is on sale now. She is the singer in spectacularly obscure Glaswegian rock band Unquiet Mind.
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