Top TVs 2023

Discover the finest products in your selected category with our Top Picks. We aggregate and analyze reviews to present you with the most highly rated and recommended items. Make confident decisions and find top-quality products that align with your needs effortlessly.

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The Sony Bravia A95K QD-OLED TV is one of the
-- As reviewed by CompsMag
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The LG G2 OLED TV is the brand’s brightest OLED TV yet, positioning OLED evo as the ultimate QD-OLED rival. Plenty of AI-powered features and the Gallery Series design also make for an elevated watching experience.
-- As reviewed by CompsMag
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While on the expensive side for a small TV, the Sony Bravia XR A90K delivers great OLED picture quality, solid sound and the slick Google TV interface. It’s a top-tier secondary TV for your home.
-- As reviewed by Tom's Guide
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Whether for watching movies, playing games, or listening to music, the Samsung QN90B Neo QLED TV (QN43QN90BAF) is a 43-inch set that outshines many larger models.
-- As reviewed by Tom's Guide
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LG’s C2 series was our top TV pick of the year for 2022, so the new C3 series has a tough act to follow. But it arrives with new HDR-improving picture processing, a pleasing look, a smart TV interface overhaul, and a wealth of features that will appeal to both gamers and movie fans. With screen sizes ranging from 42 inches all the way up to 83 inches, the C3 series is clearly designed to fit into a wide array of living spaces, and it's priced at a level that, while not cheap, could be considered reasonable for a high-performance TV. It’s a very worthy successor to the C2 series, and already a contender for top TV of 2023.
-- As reviewed by TechRadar
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The LG C2 OLED TV with OLED evo is the best OLED TV for a premium entertainment experience. Top-tier performance, plenty of port options and great gaming features all come together in a sleek package.
-- As reviewed by Tom's Guide
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The Sony A95K is an incredible TV for most uses. It looks remarkable in dark rooms because it displays deep blacks without any blooming around bright objects, and HDR content looks remarkable thanks to its vivid colors and bright highlights with near-perfect tone mapping. It's impressive for watching TV shows and excellent for watching sports in well-lit rooms because it has incredible reflection handling, but any bright light source also causes the black levels to raise. It's incredible for gaming as it has a near-instantaneous response time, variable refresh rate (VRR) support, and HDMI 2.1 bandwidth. Even though its input lag is higher than other TVs, it's still low enough for gaming.
-- As reviewed by Rtings
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It's over a year old now, but the Samsung QN90A Neo QLED TV’s mini-LED backlighting makes for unmatched picture brightness, while a bounty of smart features and a new eco-friendly remote complete the premium experience.
-- As reviewed by Tom's Guide
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Last year’s LG C1 is an outstanding television and with minimal upgrades other than slightly torqued up brightness in this year’s model, it will be hard for the average person to see any difference between it and the new C2. Of course, that still makes the C2 one of the best televisions on the market, it just doesn’t separate itself from its predecessor very well. Hopefully next year, we’ll see LG add something to its OLEDs that makes us go “wow” again.
-- As reviewed by IGN
90
The Samsung S95B is a fantastic TV overall. Its self-emissive panel technology is superb for watching movies or gaming in a dark room. HDR content looks superb thanks to its high peak brightness and exceptional color gamut. It also has an exceptional viewing angle, so you can enjoy an accurate image from any angle, making it amazing for watching sports or TV shows. Sadly, it uses an extremely uncommon pixel layout that results in noticeable color fringing and blurry text, so it's not well-suited for productivity use as a PC monitor. It's also best suited for completely dark rooms, as it has raised blacks in a room with any ambient lighting, and the screen has a pink tint to it.
-- As reviewed by Rtings