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55" Smart 4K Ultra HD HDR Neo QLED TV with Bixby, Alexa & Google Assistant

£9.9£99Clearance
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Ideal if you watch a lot of high-quality content as 4K HDR stuff looks an absolute treat on the QN85A. However, upscaling content isn't this Samsung TV's strongest skill. So if you plan to watch a lot of older movies and TV shows, you're better off looking elsewhere. Unfortunately, there's also no Dolby Vision here, so you won't get the most out of a premium Netflix subscription. It’s a testament to just how impressive the Tizen smart TV interface is that Samsung only needs to fiddle about with the minutiae of its performance to maintain its position as one of the very best around. Other brands (they know who they are) have had to make giant strides to deliver anything as logical, straightforward and user-friendly as the interface fitted to the Samsung QN85A. It’s a paradigm of good sense. This makes the QN85A an authentic option for wall-hanging, unlike the majority of its OLED rivals whose incredibly thin rear is often interrupted by a big bulge where all the electronic componentry is stashed.

Samsung uk 55” QN90A Neo QLED 4K HDR Smart TV - Samsung uk

In case that wasn’t impressive enough, you can also program the smart remote as a universal controller for your 4K Blu-ray player, amp, soundbar or other peripherals. It covers a range of devices, automatically setting them up as part of the first-time installation. However, we like that you can control it in all kinds of ways. With your voice, an app or one of the TWO remote controls. It also looks fantastic, with a combination of wide viewing angles and a nice slim profile make the Samsung QN85A a prime candidate for wall-hanging. Granted, it might not sound quite as good as it looks—very few TVs do—but you can always supplement it with a good soundbar. Also consider... The picture quality here (as long as you're not watching content of less than 1920x1080 resolution) is so impressive, it makes the relative weakness of the accompanying sound a moot point.

Mini LED shows the way with the Samsung QN85A

Steer clear of the antique stuff, though, and the QE55QN85A is at the very least an enjoyable watch and at best pretty absorbing. Samsung QN85A review: audio performance There are some audio modes worth trying, including Adaptive Audio, which adds a little more breadth to the sound, but we prefer it switched off. If you want the Q85R to try to intelligently level out the audio across different scenes and sources, then use Adaptive Volume. Verdict So, not for the first time and certainly not for the last, we’d quite firmly point you in the direction of our guide to the best soundbars around.

QN95A Neo QLED 4K HDR Smart TV (2021) - Samsung uk 55” QN95A Neo QLED 4K HDR Smart TV (2021) - Samsung uk

It’s particularly good at reducing picture noise when upscaling the 1080p Blu-ray of Fargo: the film has a slight grain to it but without Clear View switched on, that grain dances around distractingly. But it manages to smooth out the cigarette smoke in the hitmen’s car without taking the edge off its lustre as it rolls across the ceiling of the sedan. Bear in mind that Digital Clean View is best switched off for some other 1080p content and all 4K, though. The QN85A uses an IPS panel, which is your classic double-edged sword. On the plus side, it should make for nice wide viewing angles, but IPS panels tend to be quite reflective too. Overall detail levels are extremely high, which only adds to the lifelike impression of the Samsung’s pictures. Edge definition is generally smooth, and when it’s required there’s a persuasive suggestion of depth of field available, too. Set-up is straightforward, thanks to similarly logical and concise menus, and while there’s a degree of fiddling needed to get motion-handling just right, the rest of the process doesn’t take long at all. Getting a workable picture takes moments, and getting a picture that’s satisfying on every level doesn’t take all that much longer. As an upscaler of Full HD content, the Samsung handles both films and games confidently. You’ll never be conned into thinking you’re watching native 4K stuff, but equally you’ll never find much to complain about in the way the Samsung fills its enormous pixel-count. There’s a slight drop-off in detail levels, of course, and a slight reduction in the breadth of the colour palette that’s available. But edges stay decently tight, contrasts stay pleasingly wide, and even motion-handling stays properly grippy.The big thing that's new here compared to the Samsung Q80T from last year is the technology driving the panel here, so let's start there? About the only area where the QN85A doesn’t excel is motion control. The Manchester City-based content is filled with instances of rapid, complex on-screen movement, and when the going gets especially trying, the Samsung can give away how hard it’s working. Some minor edge-shimmer is the most common tell-tale, with ghosting and image-doubling so rare as to be negligible. The 55-inch Samsung QN85A reviewed here—along with the 65-inch, 75-inch and 85-inch models that are also available—is on sale now.

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