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To put this number of dimming zones in context, Samsung's outstanding 65QN95B 4K TV has ‘only’ 720 dimming zones. And it uses a massive 1920 local dimming zones to control how and where all that brightness goes in any given image. Samsung has suggested that the 75QN900B is not just the brightest TV it has ever made, but potentially the brightest TV ever released, period. On paper, at least, the QN75QN900B delivers on these two advantages of Mini LED lighting in spectacular fashion. This means far more LEDs can be fitted into the same screen area, enabling potentially more brightness and more control over how light is used to create pictures.

This sees the screen being illuminated by LEDs 40 times smaller than those found in regular LED TVs. The most important of these ‘support’ features on the QN75QN900B is its Mini LED lighting. There are still reasons to consider buying 8K, though, especially on a screen as big as this one.Įspecially when, as is the case with not just the QN75QN900B but also many other 8K TVs we’ve seen to date, the 8K resolution tends to be partnered with other premium picture features not found on flagship 4K sets. An apathy not helped by the way many promises of native 8K content over the years have consistently failed to come to fruition. This is arguably more controversial now than it would have been a couple of years ago, thanks to the public’s apparent ongoing apathy where 8K is concerned. Most importantly and obviously, the QN75QN900B has an 8K, 7680 x 4320 pixel count.

There’s a lot to get through here, so buckle up. While this makes installation a bit scary, though, no harm is ultimately done.

The only design niggle is that the TV’s much thinner rear leaves the screen feeling a bit bendy during set-up. Samsung’s Ambient Mode, meanwhile, which fills the screen with digital artworks, ‘screensaver’ videos or your own photographs when you’re not watching the TV, turns out to work particularly well with the QN75QN900B’s sleek design.Įven the QN75QN900B’s ‘smart’ remote control is a cut above the norm – not least because it carries a solar panel on its rear side, making changing batteries a thing of the past. But you also get three USBs and the inevitable ‘invisible’ connections of wi-fi and Bluetooth. In particular, there are four HDMIs, all built to the latest HDMI 2.1 specification complete with support for the latest gaming features of 4K/120Hz, VRR and ALLM. The idea being that these boxes only need a single cable to deliver both power and AV information to the screen, massively reducing the potential for cable spaghetti to ruin the 75QN900B’s ultra-clean lines.Ĭonnections carried on the One Connect box are plentiful. The One Connect, if you’re not familiar with it, is the external connections and processing box Samsung tends to ship with its premium TVs. The desktop stand also impresses by enabling you to slot the QN75QN900B’s One Connect box onto it. So long as said furniture is stable and strong enough to take such a beast of a TV, of course. Also, since it’s centrally mounted and pretty narrow for something holding up such a big screen, you can place the TV on a relatively narrow bit of furniture. This is heavy duty and complicated to build (12 screws!), but it looks handsome when it’s on. The set actually ships, though, with a desktop stand.

This further bolsters the TV’s futuristic feel – as well as making it a potentially excellent wall-hanging option if you cough up for Samsung’s optional almost-flush wall mount. More on this later.ĭespite being substantially slimmer than its predecessor, the QN75QN900B retains the same monolithic sculpting, whereby the rear panel is pretty much as sheer and flat as the screen on the front.
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These edge-placed speakers are joined by a row of no less than eight lower mid-range drivers ranged right across the TV’s rear, raising hopes of a seriously potent version of Samsung’s Object Tracking Sound system. Though there’s still enough depth, happily, to appreciate both the set’s gorgeous, gleaming metallic finish, and the way Samsung has built speakers behind the grilled surface of all four of the TV’s edges. The QN75QN900B is significantly slimmer round the back than its 2021 predecessor. This lack of bezel makes the TV feel impressively futuristic, and focuses attention on the pictures it’s producing rather than the mechanism that’s producing them.
