QUOTE(Philippng @ May 4 2022, 12:52 PM)
Here is the top 2 choices that you guy can consider
1 Best OLED Smart TV For Streaming: LG C1 OLED
The best OLED smart TV we've tested is the LG C1 OLED. It provides excellent overall performance that delivers stunning picture quality in dark rooms, and it's also good enough to use in well-lit rooms. The built-in LG webOS is easy-to-use and has a bunch of apps available to download, and there are also gaming features if you want to play video games. It also does an excellent job at upscaling lower resolution content, which is great if you don't stream in 4k.
OLED TVs are unique because they don't have a backlight and instead have individually-lit pixels that turn themselves on and off. It means that it has a near-infinite contrast ratio for deep blacks, and there's no blooming around bright objects either, making it a fantastic choice for dark room viewing. LG TVs like this one come with a unique remote called the Magic Remote. It's different than remotes from other brands because it has a point-and-press feature, like a Wii remote. It allows you to easily navigate through the menu to open your favorite apps.
If you watch HDR movies, you should be happy to know it has excellent performance for this, but its HDR peak brightness is a bit limited. It means that some highlights don't pop the way they should. Also, while it has excellent gradient handling, you'll still notice banding in scenes with shades of similar color.
2 Best OLED Smart TV For Movies: Sony A90J OLED
If you tend to watch a lot of movies, then the Sony A90J OLED is the best TV for streaming movies that we've tested with an OLED panel. Although all OLEDs deliver the same perfect black levels without any blooming, this one stands out versus the LG C1 OLED because it uses a brighter OLED panel, so highlights are vivid and pop more, especially in HDR.
While it doesn't get bright enough for very well-lit environments, it's fantastic for watching movies in dark rooms, whether you're watching content in SDR or HDR. It displays a wide range of colors in HDR, and it has excellent out-of-the-box accuracy, so you won't need to get it calibrated to enjoy it to the fullest. It also has amazing gradient handling, so you won't see any banding in scenes with shades of similar colors, and it doesn't have any trouble upscaling lower-resolution content like from DVDs and Blu-rays.
Sadly, while it's better for watching movies than the C1, it's not as good for gaming because it has higher input lag and doesn't support FreeSync VRR to reduce screen tearing with an AMD graphics card. So get this TV if you watch movies, but it's not the best choice if you also want to use it for gaming. If gaming isn't your top priority, it's the best OLED TV for streaming movies.
OLED is at it's peak already and going obsolete soon, once Micro-LED goes full scale in the market.
So it isn't worth getting an OLED TV now, especially with its incredulously still-pricey tags now.
If you're looking to buy top-of-the-range OLED TVs any time this year, I'd suggest to wait at least til end of the year or a year more.
Micro-LED technology will be the talk of the town in 2022, and very likely every TV manufacturer will have Micro-LED TVs on their shelves shortly after April 2023, replacing LCDs and OLEDs.
Micro-LED TVs has 2 main advantages over OLED TVs
• Micro-LED will not suffer burn-in (image retention) and burn out (dead pixels) like the OLED
• Micro-LED will not suffer luminance decay like the OLED
• Micro-LED has more than 2 times the brightness limit of an OLED
Well, that is, if you can afford one.. since they will cost around the same range compared to OLED then they first launched!