The QN900B is Samsung’s flagship TV for 2022 and a What Hi-Fi? Award-winner to boot. We've not yet reviewed these versions but you'll see the latest, lowest prices below. It's also available as a 50-inch, 75-inch and 85-inch model. ![]() We tested the QN94A in its 55- and 65-inch sizes. There’s still no Dolby Vision support (Samsung backs its own HDR10+ format) but you’ll be getting so much from HDR10 alone that it will hardly be on your mind. Picture quality is compelling and the sound is decent enough. It's bursting with features to match its raw performance, including a full suite of apps and services, not to mention excellent gaming features. The QN94A (known as the QN90A in the US) was one of Samsung’s top 4K TV for 2021 and is now reduced in price, making it a great buy. Samsung’s first crop of Neo QLED TVs arrived in 2021 bringing extra-fine lighting control, better contrast and a more nuanced on-screen image with a solid, three-dimensional depth. So while Samsung’s very impressive S95B QD-OLED TV offers a better picture, on the evidence of the QN95B, it’s easy to see the appeal of Mini LED sets like this one. Gaming features are plentiful, sound is decent and the operating system, while less user-friendly than before, is second-to-none for streaming service apps. The set also looks beautiful, with a standalone OneConnect box for connections that can be attached to or detached from the TV as desired. Colours look even more explosive and rich than they have before on any Samsung QLED TV too, adding up to a huge volume of colour that unlocks the full glories of today’s HDR content. ![]() ![]() The QN95B produces some of the finest picture quality we’ve ever seen from a 4K LCD TV. Can it improve on the already high standards we saw in 2021? And does it hold its own against the premium OLED-based opposition? It's a resounding yes on both counts. Samsung’s second generation of Mini LED TVs, as represented here by the QN95B, arrives with the weight of serious expectation on its shoulders. If it's within budget, there's very little to disappoint the early adopter. The new Tizen interface feels a tad cumbersome compared to previous versions, but it's still extremely good.Īll in all, the S95B is a brilliant argument for QD-OLED TV technology. Better yet, it offers a level of brightness that we haven’t seen before on any regular OLED TV.Ĭonnectivity is superb, audio quality is pleasant enough, and Samsung has included no fewer than three built-in voice assistants (Bixby, Google Assistant and Alexa). It also displays a wide selection of digital artworks on the screen when not watching TV.īut, why would you not be watching TV when the S95B serves up such phenomenal contrast? It delivers the sort of immaculate, ultra deep blacks long associated with the best of the OLED world. It's incredibly thin over the vast majority of its rear – just a couple of millimetres deep. While not always the most subtle performer, the S95B QD-OLED delivers thrills aplenty. So if you like the idea of immersing yourself in a brand new TV technology, the Samsung QN65S95B is well worth considering. ![]() The Samsung S95B is one of the world’s first Quantum Dot OLED TVs (along with the excellent Sony A95K).
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