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Our requirements for the best LCD/LED TV, including full-array local dimming and a true 120 Hz refresh rate, mean that most TVs out there don’t qualify for testing and contention in this guide. Also, TV makers have started reducing the number of 4K models they have, or reducing the features in those TVs, as they focus on 8K for their most high-end displays. We don’t think 8K is worth the investment yet, just as 4K wasn’t at the start, so we dismissed a number of premium TVs—but we still expect that prices on 8K TVs will come down over the next few years, and that 8K sets will replace 4K models as our best LCD/LED TV picks.
The big-name TV manufacturers usually introduce completely new TV lines every year and gradually phase out the previous models. We are just beginning our testing of 2022 LCD TVs. Here are the 2021 TVs we tested or considered that did not earn a spot on our list:
Samsung’s QN85A has many of the same features as the QN90A but uses a different type of LCD panel with wider viewing angles but lower contrast ratios. It also uses a mini-LED backlighting system, but it can’t get as bright as the QN90A and has fewer dimming zones (though it costs less). Since the QN90A already does a good job of offering wider viewing angles than a conventional LCD, we chose to review and recommend it instead.
The more affordable Samsung Q80A also meets our requirements for this guide but, like the QN85A, uses a different type of LCD panel with especially poor black levels. Without the mini-LED backlighting system that the Neo QLED models use, the Q80A TV offers very poor contrast, making it almost impossible to recommend.
LG’s Nano90 was the least expensive LCD TV in the company’s 2020 NanoCell lineup to use a full-array LED backlight with local dimming. We did not review this TV, butRtings.com reports that the IPS panel gives it a wide viewing angle but worse black levels and contrast ratios, and that it doesn’t get bright enough to present HDR impressively. If you need a wider viewing angle, the Sony X950H is a better choice.
LCD: LCD stands for liquid crystal display, and it’s the most common kind of television besides OLED (defined below). LCD TVs shine an LED backlight through a panel of liquid crystal, a malleable substance that reacts to electricity, opening or closing when jolted. In LCD TVs, the liquid crystal opens to allow the backlight through or closes to block it. The specific details of the opening/closing are dependent upon the arrangement of the pixels: The most common LCD arrangements are Vertical Alignment (VA) and In-Plane Switching (IPS), with the former tending to produce higher contrast and the latter tending to produce wider viewing angles. All so-called “LED” TVs are really LCD TVs, as are all current QLED and ULED TVs.
OLED: An organic light-emitting diode, or OLED, TV creates light inside each individual pixel without using a backlight and can dim each pixel individually all the way down to black, which LCD TVs can’t do. This tech gives an OLED TV an infinite contrast ratio and other benefits to help create an overall better-looking image, although at considerable additional cost. You can read more about OLED technology in this article.
Mini-LEDs: Every LCD TV made today currently uses LEDs to produce the light that shines through the LCD panel. Most TVs use LED lights that pass through a diffuser to light up the entire LCD screen. Mini-LEDs, which some TVs use, are much smaller than traditional LEDs, so TV makers can install more of them and thus create more zones of local dimming, which means less blooming or halos around bright objects. Mini-LEDs are completely different from micro-LEDs, an available (though very expensive) technology that employs individual red, green, and blue LEDs to produce an image without needing an LCD panel at all.
Quantum dots: Quantum dots are a color-enhancing technology primarily found in LCD TVs (though some 2022 OLED TVs now have them as well). Chiefly employed as a filter that’s painted onto a substrate, quantum dots are microscopic nano-crystals that, when struck with blue light, produce very vivid red or green light (depending upon the size of the crystal). Quantum dots are the primary technology that allows LCD TVs to produce the wide color gamut required to display HDR content properly, as they greatly increase the color saturation of red and green.