Xiaomi's dropping a big TV in India on February 19th. The QLED TV X Pro 75 2026 is coming back to India after five years. Their last 75-inch model sold back in 2021, so this is a long-overdue return to large-screen territory.
Xiaomi's calling the whole thing "MaxMagiQ" which appears to be the name for the TV's new processing engine.
Key Points:
- Xiaomi QLED TV X Pro 75 launches in India February 19, first 75-inch model since 2021
- "MaxMagiQ" processing engine promises enhanced contrast, color, and AI picture optimization
- AI sports processing targets cricket viewers with motion smoothing and auto-genre detection
- Gaming features implied including low-latency modes and high refresh rate support
- Available through mi.com, Amazon India, and offline stores simultaneously at launch
What MaxMagiQ Does
Xiaomi uses MaxMagiQ as the name covering everything this TV's processor handles. Their teaser promises "Bigger. Better. Clearer." which is standard TV marketing, but the artwork leans hard on contrast and color depth. Deep space visuals fill the promotional imagery—a classic trick brands use to show off black levels without giving you actual spec numbers.
We won't know if MaxMagiQ is genuinely new processing silicon or just rebranded existing tech until the launch happens.
Cricket Gets Special Attention
Sports content has its own section called "Sporting MagiQ on MAX." Cricket players dominate the imagery here. Smart move—cricket viewership in India is massive. The tagline "More intelligence meets legendary screen" points toward AI picture processing under the hood.
What does that mean practically? Likely motion smoothing tech (
MEMC) that reduces blur during fast cricket action. Possibly auto-genre detection that switches picture settings automatically based on what you're watching. Fast sports content on big screens looks blurry without proper motion handling, so this feature targets a real pain point for Indian viewers watching IPL and test matches.
Cinema Modes and Gaming Too
"Cinema MagiQ" positions this as a home theatre replacement. HDR format support and dedicated film modes seem likely given the messaging, though Xiaomi hasn't confirmed specific formats yet.
Gamers get their own section called "Gaming On MAX" showing racing footage and living room setups. Low-latency modes seem obvious here. ALLM support would automatically kick in when a PlayStation or Xbox gets connected. Specific HDMI specs like 2.1 support haven't been confirmed yet though, which matters for PS5 and Xbox Series X owners.
Sound Gets Upgraded
"MAX Sound" rounds out the teaser with "In the end, Sound is even better." Built-in TV speakers at this size usually disappoint buyers badly. Whether Xiaomi improved the actual speaker hardware or just added audio processing software stays unknown until launch.
Buy It Here
Sales start February 19th. You can grab it through mi.com,
Amazon India, or walk into physical stores the same day.