I chose a VA panel (Nixeus edg34) for a number of reasons. I play video games but not intense shooters, watch movies, and general use. 1: I’m colorblind, so the better colors of an IPS are mostly irrelevant to me. 2: I like horror games/movies, which makes me prefer VA for the darker blacks. It has a VA panel with a high native contrast ratio, and while it doesn't have a local dimming feature to improve the black levels further, it still looks good in dark rooms, and the black uniformity isn't bad. It has a subtle 1800R curve, which helps bring the edges of the screen more within your field of vision if you sit directly in front of it.
AUO has a panel like that coming out, 4K 144hz and flat. I hope the response times are similar enough that I can simply select that for the moment and wait in the future for other upgrades. Flat VA, with good response times and at a reasonable size, to me will usually be better than IPS.
And Samsung is more or less dominating VA-panel market, since many other manufacturers have to use their panels too. Samsung G7 are very good VA gaming monitors (27'' and 32''), and probably closest you get with great viewing experience under 700$ with VA, but these are monitor sizes, not TV.
The LG uses an IPS panel which gives it much better viewing angles, good if your couch is to an angle to your TV, or if you watch a lot of sports games with a large group of people. On the other hand, the Samsung uses a VA panel which gives you much deeper and uniform blacks, making it better for dark room viewing, but also has narrow viewing
Vertical Alignment (VA) Panels – VA Panels are mid-range, affordable – but more expensive compared to the TN panels. In terms of performance, they are a little better than TN panels but not good enough to justify their price points. They offer a better design experience to designers but also affect the design perspective and color gradients.
Panel manufacturer BOE has had ADS LCD panels in a few TVs so far. This is probably where LCD based panels are going in the short term future while the tech you mentioned matures and comes down in price. It will be interesting if BOE decides to cut panels at monitor sizes, especially for ultrawide. You are absolutely right on VA panels though.
So i can say that chg70 can produce accurate colors(not %100). CHG70 contrast is bad for a va panel but my other va monitor z271 has good contrast. Ips offers accurate colors, better viewing angles and color consistency, not better colors. CHG70 has best colors in the market. Its quantum dot va panel. My CHG70 has %137 sRGB %97 DCI P3 gamut volume.
IPS TVs are honestly even worse than VA TVs because the glow is very severe on large panels and it is basically determinant to viewing angles as well. This doesn't show up in reviews but in real world use, it is pretty awful on a TV if you watch a movie that is somewhat dark. Never buy a IPS TV imo, even for monitor use they are no good.
qn2dt.
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  • is va panel good for tv