Samsung QN900D is undoubtedly the top model for 2024. This television is equipped with Mini LED technology, which offers excellent picture quality – deep blacks and high brightness make films and high-resolution content look fantastic. When watching dynamic scenes in movies, the colours and details were exceptionally good – especially after calibration. HDR also delivers – bright elements have great detail levels, and colours are vibrant and natural. One of the strongest points of QN900D is the smooth motion. Supporting a refresh rate of 240 Hz at 4K resolution is rare in the market. Dynamic scenes in sports or games look incredibly smooth, with no trace of blurring. However, it’s worth adding that the full capabilities of this feature will mainly be utilised by advanced PC users. An input lag of 9 ms additionally ensures very responsive gameplay, which will surely please gamers. Tizen runs smoothly and offers access to all popular applications, such as Netflix, YouTube, or Disney+. Moreover, SmartThings features and support for AirPlay make it easy to connect the television with other devices in the home. This is a great solution if you value convenient control of your smart home. An additional feature is Ambient Mode – the television can blend into the living room decor by displaying decorative graphics. QN900D not only performs well but also looks great. Slim bezels, a central stand, and the One Connect module that allows cables to be hidden make the television present elegantly. If aesthetics are important to us, it will be hard to find something better. As a flagship model, QN900D is simply expensive. Unfortunately, the lack of agreement between Samsung and Dolby Vision may still be a significant downside. Especially when watching content on platforms that utilise this format. In the most demanding HDR scenes, it also happens that the contrast is not as perfect as one might expect. And what about 8K resolution? For now, it’s hard to find content that fully utilises it, unless we are technology enthusiasts of the future. Samsung QN900D is certainly a television for those seeking a top-tier device and are willing to pay for it. However, if we are looking for similar quality at a significantly lower price, it’s worth mentioning the equally good QN95D – it offers a similar picture quality, without the 8K resolution, which is still more of a curiosity than a standard.
The Samsung QN85F is a television that perfectly demonstrates the purpose of the Neo QLED line. On one hand, it has everything that a modern user expects – high brightness, excellent fluidity, and full support for gamers. On the other, it’s still an LCD, so it’s a technology that comes with certain compromises. The question is whether these compromises actually hinder everyday use? In practice, it’s hard not to be impressed by how the QN85F performs with HDR movies. A brightness level of 1700–1800 nits makes watching dynamic scenes truly feel like experiencing the “HDR spark,” which many competitive televisions lack. The lighting effects in films or series can literally overwhelm with intensity, yet the television doesn’t lose detail and doesn’t turn the entire image into a washed-out blob. This is precisely the kind of spectacular experience that viewers investing in a new screen are searching for. Gamers also have reasons to be pleased. (Well, maybe apart from one shortcoming related to HGIG.) It supports 144 Hz, variable refresh rate VRR, and automatic game mode ALLM. This is already a must-have set in this class, but Samsung goes further by adding a unique feature called Game Motion Plus. Thanks to this, the image in games becomes smoother, resembling the operation of a motion smoother in films, but without a noticeable increase in latency. This solution truly sets the QN85F apart from the competition. On top of all this, there’s everyday convenience. The Tizen system is fast, stable, and full of apps that we actually use – from Netflix to Apple TV to YouTube and Disney+. There’s also AirPlay support, a comprehensive SmartThings platform, and a remote that, instead of being intimidating with dozens of buttons, offers simple navigation and quick access to the most important functions. This makes the QN85F a television that you just want to reach for every day. Sure, you can point out the shortcomings. There’s no Dolby Vision, no USB recording, and the viewing angles typical of a VA panel won't impress if you sit at a steep angle. But all of this pales in comparison to how versatile and refined the QN85F is. During the day, it handles bright rooms excellently, in the evening it delivers cinematic emotions in HDR, and in games, it provides smoothness and low input lag that other models could envy. Overall, the QN85F is a television that not only successfully continues the value-for-money tradition of its predecessor, the QN85D, but even expands it with several strong points. It’s equipment that’s hard to describe in any other way than as a “safe choice” – one that won’t disappoint in any scenario and is very likely to meet the expectations of even the most demanding users.