I've recently released a video on the Philips Hue Gradient lightstrip if you guys wanna have a watch of that, thanks! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GW-xZeeXSAE.html
yo this was a quality review man, seriously. and that tv just looks insanely good. maybe one day after a few solid years of saving money and eating nothing but ramen noodle packs, i’ll be able to afford the box that it comes in 😂
Thanks man, appreciate the love and support. Gonna do a proper review of it once I've gotten to use it a little longer. Can't wait to game on it. I'm lucky in that I work in IT and I've been able to save quite a bit of money working from home. Don't need to spend money on nights out or anything, so it all gets used on tech. Can't do any massive purchases like this for a while now though. I reckon you'll blow up soon on RU-vid so I don't doubt you'll be able to get a TV like this or even better.
You only really need to worry about burn in if you're gonna be playing games for long hours and I'm talking 5+ hours every day for a long time. I guess it depends on how you'll use the TV. I will be gaming on mine, but I don't game every day and I usually stick to 2 or 3 hours in a single session
Nice review ! Just bought this tv today and let me tell you this tv looks so so so good from a $700 Samsung 4K 65 to now a LG CX 77 it is worth the money this tv is good for gaming watching movies !! Trust me you will enjoy this tv ! It’s worth your money 😊👍
Thanks for watching peeps. If you enjoyed the content, please do leave a like, it helps massively. There are timestamps in the description if you want to skip any parts :)
@@latenight11 No, it doesn't have to be calibrated. It should look amazing out of the box. Calibration is really only if you want the best possible picture, but even then the differences might not be that significant. I recently did some basic calibration using a test disc on my TV and it did improve the picture. Not by a massive margin and it does take a while for newbies, so might not be worth the effort.
Nice Tv and review. So wait, what's the highest speeds you can get when hard wired? I wonder if that can be improved with software update. I agree with you totally as much as the TV cost, they could do better than that.
Hey Hayden, thanks for watching and the kind words. This is just a first impressions video. I'll be doing a full review once I've gotten to use the TV over a longer period. In the video I show three tests and the highest I get is 92Mb. I average around 60 to 80 on a wired connection, which is more than fine for 4k content. The highest supported speed is 100Mb. LG definitely missed a trick going with an inferior network interface card. I'm planning to put an Access Point in the room, so I'll see how it fares with a wireless connection. I've not had any connection issues (touch wood), so I won't take away too many points from LG. Don't forget to like the video, it helps a lot :D
This is the exact TV that I want so good to see a detailed review of it. I think most ppl will be using wifi rather than the ethernet port so the fact that it is not Gigabit is probably not that relevant in my opinion. the picture quality looks amazing
Yeah, I agree about the gigabit ethernet port (or lack of). It won't affect that many people, so not a major downside. Hard to see how good it looks through RU-vid, but you get a bit of an idea.
@@BeforeYouBuyGuy It's honestly the best TV this year overall. The Sony OLED competitor may have a slightly better image (from reviews I've seen), but the difference is marginal imo. This has all of the gaming features and it's ready for the next gen consoles and graphics cards.
Dude, are you seriously complaining about 100Mbs Ethernet on TV? The highest transfer from any streaming service will not exceed half the 100Mbs Ethernet capability. The tv does not download and store movies so you don’t need 1Gbs Ethernet just because your ISP provides more or just cause you want a green light on your switch. Also, WiFi speeds are not as fast as you think. They are half duplex technology. They can only send and receive one at a time unlike full duplex of wired that can send and receive at the same time (go read up on it). Real world speed of WiFi is ~1/3 of the figure they advertise (don’t confuse link speeds with throughput. Again, read up. It will be depressing, I know).
Hey Debo, just thought I'd point it out. I did say it was fine for streaming content in the video. Thanks for watching and I understand where you're coming from. It isn't really that big a deal
And yeah I understand the TV doesn't store content locally. You divide by 8 to get the actual download/upload speed and still the calculated amount is more than adequate for Netflix, RU-vid, etc.
@@ManchesterTechGuy by the way, I forgot to say good video. Nice and short and to the point. Totally forgot because I was too focused on the Ethernet speed thing.
Hi Lee, don't have sky as I stream everything. However, I've watched 1080p content on the TV and honestly it looks good if you're sitting 3 or more metres away. Honestly the upscaling is really good from my experience.
@@ManchesterTechGuy Thanks buddy, I can't find one video showing the TV playing HD/SD, every video shows 4k etc. Not everyone watches this type of Res all the time, on Sky a lot of programmes are in SD/HD. I have a Panasonic OLED 65" TX-65GZ950B at the moment and wanted to upgrade, but finding it hard with some reviews. One thing people say is go with LG for gaming, and go with Panasonic for Movies.... I do both! haha
@@Lee-zg3gx I do both too and honestly if you're not a proper movie purist the difference won't be that big. For the PS5 and new xbox, LG is the best option.