The 14 Best TVs We’ve Reviewed, Plus Buying Advice (2025)
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Honorable words
There are many good TVs, we cannot add them all to our top list. Here are some great options that either miss the cut or overthrow our top list with changes.
Sony A95L: Sony finally changed this dessert screen, similar incredible painting processing and advanced colors and higher HDR brightness, as well as the rise of 2025 Bravia 8 II. This should not prevent A95L from thinking at a lower price. With a magnificent immersive image quality and intuitive Google TV interface, this is still a premium package that is very attractive on a good sale.
Sony Bravia 7: Bravia 7 (7/10, Wıred recommends) is a magnificent display that offers bright shine in fine details, naturalist colors and suave subtlety. The biggest kick is very weak axis imaging that may be difficult to swallow at the price price. Otherwise, this is worth thinking about Sony Glow fans, especially Sony seems to be more liberally downloading the best QLED TVs than OLED models.
TCL QM7K (2025): I had a love/hate relationship with QM7K. Part of TCL’s new sensitive dimming series reaches its rich black levels and contrast OLED heights, matches with good brightness for some amazing moments. Problem? The colors of the examination model were out of clay with strange green tone of gray and gray toning. Fortunately, I have confirmed that TCL’s latest product software update fixes the problem. The picture of the TV and the colors of the TV are still unable to capture Premium TVs, and I have found a disturbing performance problem with the QM7. You should not buy at full price, but if you can buy the 65 -inch model for $ 1,000 or less, this is an attractive choice.
Samsung QN90C: Samsung’s QN90C (8/10, Wirered recommends), another potential agreement, was one of our favorite bright -room TVs. Income in a wide variety of sizes and matches a bright and colorful picture with a large number of beauties – especially on a megasale.
TCL QM7: There is only one thing that holds a beautiful balanced QM7 (6/10, Wired reviewed) from our main list: a software disruption. During my review, I had a problem that the SDR background levels affect HDR, which could lead to serious brightness limitations. Although TCL has fixed the problem in a product software update for me, I have never received any approval in a wider OTA correction. Most people will probably not have this problem, so the QM7 is still worth considering, but make sure and check before throwing the box.
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