I’m looking at getting the 43/50” model and you’re right, they are actually both VA. All the reviews are the 55” IPS model. How has your experience been with the 50” VA model, do you game at all as I’m looking to pair it with a Series X?
@@Foggy_2806 I only have a PS4 and PC. I don't know how it'll work with current gen consoles but I plan to buy a PS5 in the future. From my experience, the TV is really amazing for the price. I'm able to play some games at 120fps and I can really feel the difference. The Ambilight is a good addition for gaming and movies. The sound was a good surprise for me because I wasn't expecting it to be so good.
Wow, that comparison with Samsung Q60 at 06:30 is food for thought - Samsung has way better picture quality! I'm actually shocked at the difference - but I love the ambilights, so I've thrown my money at the Philips instead. It is a sacrifice!
Hello thank u so much for this, can I ask where this and the 50PUS8507/12 model is made/manufactured please, I live in UK and the EU region, I hear Poland but not certain, thanks 🙏
Greetings, 55pus 8508 has clouding and light leakage in the dark scene. What is the solution? It has been 1 month since the service report has been received by Philips Necmi Elektronik Antalya and it reports like this😢
i like the ambilight and 120hz refresh rate, for the price its almost perfect, remote control could be smaller and contrast uniformity settings easier to change, but overall very good tv.
I have a mid-range Philips TV which is super annoying sometimes, laggy interface, buggy software, only 1 GB of RAM etc.. this one looks smooth and responsive though. Can you check how many GB RAM does it have?
I got the the same model but I got vertical lines in the screen. I see that you got the same lines in the panel in the video does that not border you? I like the screen only want to fix the vertical lines in the panel
in direct comparison, similar wide color gamut performance, there is difference in brightness, but many similar priced tvs have only 60hz native refresh rate, while 8807 has 120hz.
@@jevz7512 Everything goes in favour of PHILIPS... Natural picture and beautiful colours,but you have to do the set up correctly,and not to mention the Ambilight,that is so helpful when you watch TV in dark room,to relax your eyes...
Hey! Do you have an extended version of the comparison of both TV's? Are both TV's on 4K during the comparison, because Samsung seems so much sharper and visible compared to the blurry image of Philips here? Would be great to hear your answer because I am divided between both of these TV's.
it all depends in which picture profile is comparison and if is motion processing disabled (movie profile) or enabled vivid profile, in general philips wins here easily, because it has faster motion processing and native refresh rate. Though out of the box samsung q60 has smarter motion settings for comparisons. You can easily change motion settings on philips, but u cant change 60hz to 120hz on samsung q60
i didn't notice while watching movies, but banding is visible in black screen uniformity test or in dark space scenes, etc, but its not annoying it is comparable with other tvs with mva or ips type screens
I have the 8857, I removed the corner silicone protection tho on the screen it appears there is a proctective screen, do I remove that please? you didn't remove it and that is why I am asking :D
Hello, how is your 8857? You have the 55' inch version? Are you happy with it? Any problems or things you didn;t like? Have you tried it on PS5? Sorry for so many questions, I cant find much online about it. thank you.
@@kothtath Hi there yes it is the 55 inch version, I am very happy with it, I am using it as a pc monitor 120hz which for gaming is astonishing, but I have to upgrade the gpu soon to get the maximum graphics possible, therefore on an xbox or ps5 I think it would be rather smashing full graphics and 120hz as I've seen past videos with older tv models. Also make sure to get a high speed 8k\120hz hdmi wire and plug to your hdmi 2.1 sockets. So when it comes to tv itself great sound top notch picture and nice ambilight. I would've chosen philips oled but since I am using it as a monitor, I want to avoid screen burning and this was their best option. Hope this helps :D
@RAV225 | Gaming Reviews | Gaming Clips Hello, it does help a lot thank you!! Last question if you know, does it have IPS or VA panel? To check the difference try viewing it from angle, if the colour distorts it is VA. Thank you again!
@@majorskies7091 i already got Q60B with good deal as I already have 120hz Q80T from 2020 i just needed second tv for 60fps gaming . Philips pus8807 have everything but i've got incredible discount for Q60b for 430$
@@DidoInFlames ahh that's fair enough then! Q60 is a fine TV in that case im a little philips bias I admit but q60 is nice too as long as its not the current nano 8 series from lg those are really bad imo Enjoy your new telly
@@DidoInFlames The Q60B is a okay TV and you could do far worse, but to compare it to a car, The Q60B is a Fiesta while the 8807 is a 3 Series. Samsung have been under incredible criticism over the past 24 months for terribly poor QC testing, backlight bleeding and screen distortion is common; Google Samsung TV uniformity for a shock. The Q60 doesn’t have VRR, 120 Hz, FreeSync, dimming tech, Dolby Vision or Ambilight. It’s edge lit which is pretty poor for the price and also has a lower peak/HDR brightness level and a lower contrast ratio. If you can get the Samsung for half of the Philips, then I’d say do it. If not, save the extra towards the Philips 😀
@@andrew21030 Are you happy with it? Any issues or shortcomings in general? I'm looking for a tv in this price range and 43PUS8807 is one of the options.
@@ol2510 I'm talking to Philips at the minute for ways to make some slight changes and if things are actually right. When it's turned on it always goes onto the last source, not the android TV home screen. For some reason I thought it would do it that way as I'm used to always using a Roku stick. When on ps5 HDR it seems to vertically stretch the picture and cuts the bottom off and it'll randomly sort itself but then do it again. One thing that I was happy about was on 120hz one game said when it's on its highest graphics setting it said it'll do 40 tops but the TV is actually pushing it all the way. You'll have to get used to changing picture settings based on the source as it remembers them based on that. Motion seems jittery in some places and I've tried each mode and on personal. Transitioning to and from HDR is just a black screen and I just thought it'd be more fluid but that might be standard on all TVs
Does anyone know how to turn on the VRR & ALLM on this TV for the PS5? Says the TV does not support those. Even though on the philips website it says it does support it
I was seriously considering this TV partly for the 120hz as it will be used for gaming and as a monitor for the PC. But after seeing the comparison with the Samsung (which is also 30 pound cheaper) I'm starting to think Samsung is the better choice even if it means losing the 120hz.
Вы хотите сказать, что Samsung будет поддерживать Dolby Atmos & Dolby vision? Не верю. И не забывайте про Android Tv. По моему мнению это лучший вариант. Наступило время не для просмотра кабельного ТВ, а для просмотра контента в глобальной паутине!! Ну и в игры поиграть....
is it even important to have 120hz ? its not like we can play any games at that refresh rate, most of games are 30-60 frames. so why bother with 100+hz tvs ?
yes its not essential for casual gamers, so 4k60 is okay, but if you are hardcore or just want the best possible smoothness, the 4k120fps is the way to go.
For gaming it is preferred. That said, if you're asking the question then you don't need it. I was considering this TV for the 120hz, but having seem the quality difference compared to the Q60b I think I'll stick with 60hz.
This Philips has an IPS screen. Secondly, the TVs are not set up properly. If you want to have a Philips with a VA panel, I recommend the Philips model 8507, size 58˝. Otherwise, the 8807 is a very good TV. Here are the settings for this Philips model. Picture Style: Movies/Natural Color: 50 Contrast background sheet direction: 70-100 Sharpness: 1-2 Black Level: 50 Sharp Image/Noise Reduction: Minimum Sharp Image/MPEG Artifact Reduction: Minimum Sharpness/Ultra Resolution: On Color/Color Enhancement: Off Color/Color Gamut: Normal Color/Color Temperature: Warm - Normal Contrast/Contrast Mode: Optimal Picture Contrast/HDR upscaling: Off/On Contrast/HDR Perfect: Off Contrast/Dynamic Contrast: Minimum Contrast/Video Contrast: 100 Contrast/Light Sensor: Off Contrast/Gamma: 0 Motion/Motion Style: Movies/Standard/Smooth
Damn, is the image of the PUS8807 really that much less detailed compared to the samsung? I bought the 43 inch version of the PUS8807 earlier today, and that comparison is making me doubt my decision. They were both tested at the same resolution etc?
@@stefanlukic7272 is the Philips actually better when you adjust it? Because I was seriously considering getting this tv but after seeing the comparison I’m not sure I want it anymore