For me more things count than comparing tv’s to reference monitor. But I do like the tv picture being close to intended (not vivid modes). What I like: gaming capabilities Movies and series capabilities Multi Audio pass trough options like dts Longetivity (which is barely reviewed) Connectivity port options How companies handle soft and firmware updates
I own a 77” S89C QD-OLED and 65 A90J, but the dropping prices on large, good-quality Mini-LED LCDs cannot be ignored. 98” TCL QM7 for $2500? Insane. Of course, it will have several downsides compared to a top tier OLED, but 90% or more of consumers don’t care. I’m even tempted by the Sony 85X93L Mini-LED on clearance for $2400.
Those huge MiniLED/LCD TVs are tempting, for sure, but not everyone has the space for a 98-inch, or even a 77-inch or 85-inch TV. If 65-inch is the largest you can fit in your living space, OLED and QD-OLED still beat LCD TVs (even MiniLED LCD TVs) on most qualitative factors and aren't appreciably more expensive. Other than the top-end models, most 65-inch OLEDs can be found in the $1299 to $1799 price range. Yes, MiniLED TVs can get brighter, but they still have artifacts like haloing and poor image uniformity which don't appear on OLED TVs.
For me more things count than comparing tv’s to reference monitor. But I do like the tv picture being close to intended (not vivid modes).
What I like:
gaming capabilities
Movies and series capabilities
Multi Audio pass trough options like dts
Longetivity (which is barely reviewed)
Connectivity port options
How companies handle soft and firmware updates
@@masomaf all valid points. Agree, there’s more to a TV than just ultimate picture quality.
I own a 77” S89C QD-OLED and 65 A90J, but the dropping prices on large, good-quality Mini-LED LCDs cannot be ignored. 98” TCL QM7 for $2500? Insane. Of course, it will have several downsides compared to a top tier OLED, but 90% or more of consumers don’t care.
I’m even tempted by the Sony 85X93L Mini-LED on clearance for $2400.
Those huge MiniLED/LCD TVs are tempting, for sure, but not everyone has the space for a 98-inch, or even a 77-inch or 85-inch TV. If 65-inch is the largest you can fit in your living space, OLED and QD-OLED still beat LCD TVs (even MiniLED LCD TVs) on most qualitative factors and aren't appreciably more expensive. Other than the top-end models, most 65-inch OLEDs can be found in the $1299 to $1799 price range. Yes, MiniLED TVs can get brighter, but they still have artifacts like haloing and poor image uniformity which don't appear on OLED TVs.