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Hisense Built a TV That Follows You Around the House

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S6 FollowMe the gadgeteer 2

CES 2026 NEWS – The television industry has spent decades convincing everyone that bigger is better. Screen sizes keep climbing, wall mounts keep getting more elaborate, and the assumption remains that a TV belongs in one spot, permanently anchored to whatever room you designate as the living room. Hisense thinks that assumption is outdated.

The company just announced the S6 FollowMe, a 32-inch 4K touchscreen display designed to roll from room to room on a freestanding pedestal. It tilts, rotates, lifts, and moves with you, treating the screen less like an appliance and more like a portable tool. The idea is simple: instead of walking to where your TV lives, the TV comes to you.



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This is part of Hisense’s growing Lifestyle TV lineup (the company’s flexible-form category that includes rotating and portable displays), a segment that prioritizes flexibility over raw specs. LG’s StanbyME proved there’s appetite for screens that move with you; Hisense is betting the category has room to grow. The S6 arrives at a moment when more people work from home, cook while streaming, and expect technology to adapt to their habits rather than the other way around.

Why This Exists

Fixed televisions create friction that most people have learned to ignore. You want to watch something while cooking, so you crane your neck toward the living room. You take a video call from your home office, but the webcam angle is awkward because your monitor was never designed for that. You move to the bedroom but the content stays behind. These are small inconveniences, but they compound.

The S6 FollowMe is Hisense’s answer to that friction. The display sits on an adjustable pedestal base that lets you raise or lower it to eye level whether you are standing at a kitchen counter, sitting at a desk, or relaxing on a couch. An included easel stand offers a second mounting option for tabletop use, which makes the screen feel less like a television and more like a large tablet on legs.

Touchscreen interaction changes the relationship between viewer and screen. Instead of reaching for a remote, you tap, swipe, and scroll directly on the display. Hisense frames this as useful for browsing recipes, controlling smart home devices, video calling, or displaying artwork when the screen is not actively streaming content.




Ondre Clarke, Head of TV Product Marketing at Hisense USA, put it this way: “The S6 FollowMe introduces a more human approach to screens, one that moves with you, responds to touch and adapts to the moments that matter most throughout the day.” That language matters because it signals where Hisense sees this product fitting: not as a home theater centerpiece, but as a companion device that floats through daily routines.

What Makes It Different

The mobility is the headline feature. The S6 rolls smoothly between rooms, and the form factor stays slim enough that it does not dominate whatever space it enters. Hisense designed the stand to complement a range of interiors, prioritizing minimal footprint and refined aesthetics over the chunky utility of traditional TV carts.

A 32-inch screen is modest by modern standards, and that is intentional. This is not a display meant to replace your main television. It is designed to supplement it, filling gaps that a large, wall-mounted screen cannot address. Think of it as the TV that handles everything your primary TV is too big or too stationary to do.

Built for Wireless Living

Battery power separates the S6 from most displays on the market. Hisense claims up to 10 hours of use on a single charge, which means you can unplug from the wall and carry the screen to wherever you need it without worrying about outlet access. You feel that freedom the first time you roll it onto a patio without hunting for an extension cord. That kind of runtime makes the portability meaningful rather than theoretical.




An anti-glare, low-reflection panel helps the display perform in varied lighting conditions. Kitchens, patios, and rooms with large windows all present visibility challenges that typical glossy screens handle poorly. The S6’s panel treatment addresses that, keeping the image readable whether you are indoors or near a window.

Connectivity runs through Wi-Fi 6, which handles streaming, smart home integration, and video calls without requiring a wired Ethernet connection. Hisense has not disclosed which smart TV platform powers the S6, so expect details on app availability and interface closer to launch. The wireless focus reinforces the product’s core premise: a screen that can go anywhere should not be tethered to anything.

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Who Should Skip This

If you are shopping for a cinematic home theater experience, this is not it. The 32-inch screen and 4K resolution are solid for personal viewing, but they are not going to deliver the immersive scale of a 65-inch or larger display. Anyone prioritizing movie night over daily flexibility should look elsewhere.




The touchscreen interaction also assumes a certain kind of user. If you prefer keeping distance between yourself and your screens, if you like remotes and voice control, the hands-on interface might feel unnecessary. The S6 rewards people who want to treat their display like a giant tablet, and that is not everyone.

The Bottom Line

Hisense is betting that the future of screens is not about getting bigger. It is about getting smarter about where and how you use them. The S6 FollowMe represents a different philosophy: screens should fit naturally into how people live, not dictate it.

If you have found yourself wishing your TV could follow you to the kitchen, the home office, or the patio, this addresses that friction directly. The 10-hour battery, touchscreen interface, and room-to-room mobility turn a traditionally static device into something more fluid and responsive.

What matters now is pricing and availability, which Hisense has not yet announced. If the S6 lands at an accessible price point, it could carve out a real niche for people who value flexibility over raw screen size. If it prices like a premium secondary display, the audience narrows considerably. Either way, Hisense is making a clear statement: the television does not have to stay in one place anymore.






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