TV design

Designed for the ten-foot experience

Interfaces built for phones rarely work well from a bed. A hotel TV needs its own design language.

Published June 29, 2026 by TVshuru. Freshness checked June 29, 2026.

A comfortable hotel bedroom designed for relaxed viewing.

A hotel TV is used from across the room. The guest may be lying down, sharing the screen with family, holding a simple remote, and browsing casually. That is a different design problem from a mobile app.

TVshuru is designed for the ten-foot experience: large typography, generous spacing, simple categories, calm screens, and remote-friendly interactions. Guests should not need precision. They should not need to read tiny labels. They should not feel like a website has been stretched onto a television.

This is especially important as hotel TVs become more connected. LG's 2025 hotel TV update added Google Cast support alongside AirPlay and used QR pairing to help guests connect without typing personal credentials into the TV.

The same design lesson applies to hotel services. The TV is excellent for browsing. The phone is excellent for private details. A strong in-room experience respects both.

Because hotel TVs deserve hotel-first design.

Sources

Plan your in-room pilot

Want guests to discover more from the room TV?

Share your property details and we will suggest a TV-first guest services flow for your rooms, including service discovery, QR handoff, and operations fit.

Useful for hotels, serviced apartments, resorts, and multi-property groups.Built around visible, low-friction guest actions.

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