Huawei has rolled out the Smart Screen S7 X Pro, a premium new TV for its Vision Smart Screen lineup that tries to be a gaming display, a living-room speaker, and a smart-home control panel all at once. The catch is that it is currently listed as out of stock in China, so for now the company is talking up ambition more than availability. The Huawei Smart Screen S7 X Pro starts at 6,299 yuan for the 65-inch model, rises to 7,999 yuan for the 75-inch version, and tops out at 10,999 yuan for the 85-inch set.
That pricing places it firmly in the upper tier, where Huawei is not just selling a screen but a bundle of features meant to keep users inside its ecosystem rather than wandering off to a separate soundbar or streaming box.
4K Super Mini LED panel and 288Hz refresh rate
At the center of the S7 X Pro is a 4K Super Mini LED panel with up to 1,000 local dimming zones. That should mean tighter contrast and better control over bright highlights, which is the whole point of Mini LED: fewer washed-out blacks, less haloing, and a picture that looks more expensive than your average living-room slab.
Huawei is also leaning hard into gaming with a 288Hz refresh rate. That number will grab attention, especially in a segment where brands love to throw refresh rates around like confetti, but the real test will be whether buyers actually have the hardware and content to make use of it.
An AI-based light control system automatically adjusts brightness to match viewing conditions and cuts glare. Samsung and TCL have spent years pushing similar picture-tuning ideas in their own Mini LED sets, so Huawei is clearly following a well-worn playbook: make the TV sound smarter than the room it is sitting in.
2.1-channel audio and HarmonyOS 4.3
Sound gets a rare amount of attention here. The TV uses a three-way 2.1-channel system that can reach bass as low as 60Hz, which should help it avoid the thin, tinny fate that usually awaits built-in speakers. It is not a substitute for a serious home theater setup, but it is a sensible move for people who do not want another box under the TV stand.
The Smart Screen S7 X Pro runs HarmonyOS 4.3 and uses a Huawei-developed processor. Huawei says its memory expansion technology improves multitasking across apps and services, which sounds very much like the sort of spec-sheet claim that matters most when the interface is under load and least when the demo reel is running smoothly.
Smart-home features, remote control, and wall-friendly design
Outside pure entertainment, Huawei is stuffing in a long list of extras: 4K Super Projection, AI Fitness, motion-controlled games, karaoke support, remote home monitoring, video calling, remote assistance, and a children’s mode. A new smart pointing remote can control both the TV and compatible set-top boxes, which is one of those small conveniences that sounds minor until you have three remotes and no patience.
The display itself has an ultra-slim design intended for flush wall mounting, giving it a cleaner look in modern interiors. That design choice fits Huawei’s broader strategy: make the screen feel like the center of a connected home, not just another giant rectangle for movies and sports.
For now, the bigger question is whether Huawei can turn this from a strong feature list into a product people can actually buy outside China. If the company expands availability, the S7 X Pro could become a serious option for households already invested in Huawei devices; if not, it will stay another example of a very capable TV that most buyers can only admire from afar.

