![]() ![]() Yes, some of those 1.0 problems I mentioned can be found in the S95B, and for some of them it’s too soon to say they’re not there. The verdict? Right out of the gate, Samsung has bypassed a decade of incremental OLED improvements, and come out with an achingly good TV even by today’s high standards. I had been hoping to review Samsung’s S95B by sitting it side-to-side with either a Samsung QLED TV, or a TV with an LG OLED panel in it, such as Sony’s wonderful (if annoying) A90J OLED TV.Īlas, I only got to review it in a room with no other screens to compare it to, which means I had to spend hours watching content, taking careful notes of anything that appeared to show any of the 1.0 defects I was worried about, before racing back to the Labs to watch the same content on a Samsung QLED screen. Early LG OLED screens looked distinctly maroon when they were turned off.
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