frontpagehocuspocusblade posted Apr 05, 2026 11:22 PM
Item 1 of 2
Item 1 of 2
frontpagehocuspocusblade posted Apr 05, 2026 11:22 PM
50" Philips 50PUG7675/F7 QLED+ 4K UltraHD 144Hz Google Smart TV
+ Free S&H$258
$278
7% offWalmart
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-The TV is very, very light. Zero assistance required for setup.
-The "4k 144hz" advertising is technically true because out of the box it does indeed have 144hz mode, but once you run system updates you lose access to it. The TV is really 4k 120hz (which is fine) and it comes out of the box with a factory-overclock on the screen to achieve 144hz.
-The display itself looks good to me other than it having very noticeable color-shift at an angle. It's a lower-quality VA-panel so color-shift is unavoidable but at least the contrast and direct-viewed coolers look good.
-The smart features work but the processor is fairly slow. It also operates with a simple a que-system for remote commands unlike more expensive smart TV's. For example: if I hit Netflix on my LG C1 and then go "oops, actually I meant to hit Prime" and hit the prime button before Netflix opens it will cancel out the Netflix order and open Prime instead. This TV however will fully open Netflix before then opening Prime -which means if you mash buttons while it's being slow you're just making yourself have to wait longer as it opens everything you pressed in the order you pressed the buttons.
-The speakers actually aren't the worst I've heard on a TV. Passable for a small room until you can get a sound bar or something else.
Overall for the price I can't complain much. It does 4k 120hz for gaming on modern consoles, the speakers are okay, the picture looks good so long as you're not far off at an angle, the smart features work albeit not quite like I've come to expect, and it's incredibly easy to set up because it's crazy-light. Everything else around this price has 60hz refresh-rate -everything. If anything it's nice to have a budget option to pair with a console without making too many sacrifices.
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-The TV is very, very light. Zero assistance required for setup.
-The "4k 144hz" advertising is technically true because out of the box it does indeed have 144hz mode, but once you run system updates you lose access to it. The TV is really 4k 120hz (which is fine) and it comes out of the box with a factory-overclock on the screen to achieve 144hz.
-The display itself looks good to me other than it having very noticeable color-shift at an angle. It's a lower-quality VA-panel so color-shift is unavoidable but at least the contrast and direct-viewed coolers look good.
-The smart features work but the processor is fairly slow. It also operates with a simple a que-system for remote commands unlike more expensive smart TV's. For example: if I hit Netflix on my LG C1 and then go "oops, actually I meant to hit Prime" and hit the prime button before Netflix opens it will cancel out the Netflix order and open Prime instead. This TV however will fully open Netflix before then opening Prime -which means if you mash buttons while it's being slow you're just making yourself have to wait longer as it opens everything you pressed in the order you pressed the buttons.
-The speakers actually aren't the worst I've heard on a TV. Passable for a small room until you can get a sound bar or something else.
Overall for the price I can't complain much. It does 4k 120hz for gaming on modern consoles, the speakers are okay, the picture looks good so long as you're not far off at an angle, the smart features work albeit not quite like I've come to expect, and it's incredibly easy to set up because it's crazy-light. Everything else around this price has 60hz refresh-rate -everything. If anything it's nice to have a budget option to pair with a console without making too many sacrifices.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
-The TV is very, very light. Zero assistance required for setup.
-The "4k 144hz" advertising is technically true because out of the box it does indeed have 144hz mode, but once you run system updates you lose access to it. The TV is really 4k 120hz (which is fine) and it comes out of the box with a factory-overclock on the screen to achieve 144hz.
-The display itself looks good to me other than it having very noticeable color-shift at an angle. It's a lower-quality VA-panel so color-shift is unavoidable but at least the contrast and direct-viewed coolers look good.
-The smart features work but the processor is fairly slow. It also operates with a simple a que-system for remote commands unlike more expensive smart TV's. For example: if I hit Netflix on my LG C1 and then go "oops, actually I meant to hit Prime" and hit the prime button before Netflix opens it will cancel out the Netflix order and open Prime instead. This TV however will fully open Netflix before then opening Prime -which means if you mash buttons while it's being slow you're just making yourself have to wait longer as it opens everything you pressed in the order you pressed the buttons.
-The speakers actually aren't the worst I've heard on a TV. Passable for a small room until you can get a sound bar or something else.
Overall for the price I can't complain much. It does 4k 120hz for gaming on modern consoles, the speakers are okay, the picture looks good so long as you're not far off at an angle, the smart features work albeit not quite like I've come to expect, and it's incredibly easy to set up because it's crazy-light. Everything else around this price has 60hz refresh-rate -everything. If anything it's nice to have a budget option to pair with a console without making too many sacrifices.
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