The brightest QLED and LCD TVs can get brighter than any OLED model, which is a particular advantage in bright rooms and with HDR content. QLED/LCD TVs, even the best ones with the most effective full-array local dimming, let some light through, leading to more washed-out, grayer black levels and blooming around bright sections. One of the most important image quality factors is black level, and their emissive nature means OLED TVs can turn unused pixels off completely, for literally infinite contrast. There's some variation among different OLED TVs, for example the LG A2 with its 60Hz panel compared to 120Hz on other OLED TVs, but they're not nearly as significant as the differences between various QLED TV series. Meanwhile, every OLED TV I've reviewed has very similar image quality - all have earned a 10/10 in picture quality in my tests. Instead they're the result of mini-LED backlights, better full-array local dimming, bright highlights and better viewing angles, which help them outperform QLED (and non-QLED) TVs that lack those extras. ![]() ![]() That's mainly because the biggest improvements in the picture quality of QLED sets don't have much to do with quantum dots. Samsung and TCL each have multiple QLED series and the most expensive ones perform a lot better than the cheaper ones.
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