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02/11/24 | Best Buy | $549.99 |
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Sorry. I forgot I already replied to you, and I could've just added this to that. Anyways, save up a little longer (if you need to) and get an LG C2 or higher. The A2 is honestly really more of a nice bedroom TV.
Aside from even gaming at 120hz, which like you said has very few games that can do it, the C series also has VRR, which this does not. VRR smoothes out gameplay big time. Anytime a game has an inconsistent framerate, the TV will adjust its own framerate to match it (as long as it doesn't drop below 48fps), so that it's not all choppy looking.
The C TVs also have 4 HDMI ports, instead of 2 and they're much brighter than this. They also have Dolby Precision Detail for Dolby Vision content, which further enhances dark scenes. Precision Detail is only available on LG OLEDs, and even then it's only on the C2/G2 & I'm assuming the C3/G3.
For anyone who hasn't heard of Dolby Precision Detail (even Rtings never mentioned it), it is only on two of the picture settings: Cinema Home and Vivid (don't use Vivid). It only works with Dolby Vision content, not regular HDR. It's at the bottom of the Clarity settings when you're on Cinema Home.
Aside from even gaming at 120hz, which like you said has very few games that can do it, the C series also has VRR, which this does not. VRR smoothes out gameplay big time. Anytime a game has an inconsistent framerate, the TV will adjust its own framerate to match it (as long as it doesn't drop below 48fps), so that it's not all choppy looking.
The C TVs also have 4 HDMI ports, instead of 2 and they're much brighter than this. They also have Dolby Precision Detail for Dolby Vision content, which further enhances dark scenes. Precision Detail is only available on LG OLEDs, and even then it's only on the C2/G2 & I'm assuming the C3/G3.
For anyone who hasn't heard of Dolby Precision Detail (even Rtings never mentioned it), it is only on two of the picture settings: Cinema Home and Vivid (don't use Vivid). It only works with Dolby Vision content, not regular HDR. It's at the bottom of the Clarity settings when you're on Cinema Home.
Like buying an 80k car and skimping on the 5k package that gets you leather and heated seats and airplay. Not equal ratios I know, but the point stands.
I calibrated using classy tech calibration video on youtube and was pleased with the results.
Also heads up when I unboxed it the unit had some pretty bad vertical banding issues. This is pretty common esp with this model, so be sure to run the pixel cleaning routine and run some HDR content for a couple hours (which removed it for me).
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No problem. This TV is still nice (it's an LG OLED after all), but a friend of mine has an A2 and he has always kind of regretted it.
It won't be an issue. It's not the brightest TV, but it's still brighter than the majority of regular LED TVs. Most budget LED TVs only have a peak brightness of around 270nits - 400nits, and everyone, but the most picky viewers, has been fine with that for many years. This is over 500nits. That's a lot lower than the C2, but certainly watchable in a bright room. Most people don't know that and seem to think anything under 1,000nits is so dim you can't see it.
It's an OLED, so it's bright no matter what, and has the best viewing angles. All this talk about "not bright enough" is dumb.
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Yeah. I'll never understand the, "OLED isn't good for bright rooms" argument that so many people spout off. They're plenty bright. In fact, QD-OLED, which is significantly brighter than regular OLED, is worse for bright rooms, because the blacks on every single QD-OLED display that is out right now turn grey when there's any amount of ambient light hitting the screen.