Hisense is the latest TV manufacturer to lean into the idea that the world needs touchscreen smart TVs that are not fixed to a wall, but can move around the house for convenience. At CES 2026, the company unveiled the S6 FollowMe, a 32-inch, 4K, touchscreen smart display designed to move from room to room and adapt to how people actually use screens today.
Rather than being a traditional television, the S6 FollowMe arrives on the scene to compete with the likes of Samsung’s Moving Style Edge and the LG StanbyMe 2, which have already proven that such lifestyle TVs have a market. From the available images, the S6 FollowMe looks pretty similar in design to the LG and Samsung models, and it is not a mere coincidence.
This is a tried-and-tested form factor, and Hisense doesn’t want to get the obvious wrong. To that accord, S6 sits on a wheeled, freestanding stand and is built to roll easily between rooms. The display supports tilt, rotation, and height adjustment, allowing it to transform from floor height to table height depending on where it’s being used.
Hisense wants the screen to be positioned at a perfect viewing angle from a couch, alongside a desk, or standing next to the kitchen counter. More than the TV application, Hisense is framing S6 FollowMe as a mobile digital hub. A hub that can handle streaming, video calls, recipe viewing, and light smart-home control without claiming a permanent spot in your living room.
At 32 inches, which is the same as that of Samsung’s Moving Style Edge, the S6 FollowMe lands in the full-size TV segment. Its 4K UHD touchscreen features an anti-glare, low-reflection screen designed to stay readable under different lighting conditions, which matters if you are moving the S6 between a naturally lit kitchen and a dimmer living room. The TV supports Wi-Fi 6 and has a built-in camera for glitch-free streaming and video calls without a wired connection.
The biggest role in making the Hisense S6 FollowMe wireless and mobile is that of its built-in battery, which can run for up to 10 hours of casual viewing and calling. That battery life reinforces the idea that the S6 is meant to function independently of wall power, and isn’t your traditional TV. The audio of the TV is managed by an integrated DTS Virtual:X system, tuned for clearer dialogue and a broader soundstage, without requiring external speakers.
The S6 FollowMe arrives to challenge the growing category of mobile, lifestyle TVs, which have established demand for screens that don’t require a permanent installation or a particular room design. There is no word on pricing as of now, but it takes no guessing that Hisense will place the tag somewhere around how LG and Samsung are pricing their options. The Hisense lifestyle TV will be available in the US starting May 1, 2026.

