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expiredChampagne13 posted May 19, 2026 08:03 AM
expiredChampagne13 posted May 19, 2026 08:03 AM

Pioneer 4K UHD Roku Smart LED TVs: 65" $250, 55"

+ Free S&H

$180

$360

50% off
Best Buy
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Deal Details
Best Buy has select Pioneer 4K UHD Roku Smart LED TVs on sale from $179.99. Shipping is free for My Best Buy Members (free to join) or choose store pickup where stock permits.

Note: Availability for pickup may vary by location.

Thanks to Community Member Champagne13 for finding this deal.

Available:
  • 55" (PN55-R851-26U) $179.99
  • 65" (PN65-R851-26U) $249.99
Specs (55"):
  • Resolution: 3840 x 2160p (4K UHD)
  • Display Type: Standard Direct-Lit LED
  • Refresh Rate: 60Hz
  • HDR Format: HDR10
  • Dolby Audio
  • Works with Apple AirPlay / Apple Home
  • Supports Alexa / Google Home
  • Smart Platform: Roku TV
  • Ports:
    • 4x HDMI
    • 2x USB
    • 1x Optical Audio
    • 1x Composite
    • 1x Ethernet
    • 1x RF Tuner
    • 1x Headphone
    • Wi-Fi 5

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff

Original Post

Written by Champagne13
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Best Buy has select Pioneer 4K UHD Roku Smart LED TVs on sale from $179.99. Shipping is free for My Best Buy Members (free to join) or choose store pickup where stock permits.

Note: Availability for pickup may vary by location.

Thanks to Community Member Champagne13 for finding this deal.

Available:
  • 55" (PN55-R851-26U) $179.99
  • 65" (PN65-R851-26U) $249.99
Specs (55"):
  • Resolution: 3840 x 2160p (4K UHD)
  • Display Type: Standard Direct-Lit LED
  • Refresh Rate: 60Hz
  • HDR Format: HDR10
  • Dolby Audio
  • Works with Apple AirPlay / Apple Home
  • Supports Alexa / Google Home
  • Smart Platform: Roku TV
  • Ports:
    • 4x HDMI
    • 2x USB
    • 1x Optical Audio
    • 1x Composite
    • 1x Ethernet
    • 1x RF Tuner
    • 1x Headphone
    • Wi-Fi 5

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff

Original Post

Written by Champagne13

Community Voting

Deal Score
+128
Good Deal
Visit Best Buy

Price Intelligence

Model: Pioneer - 65" Class LED 4K UHD Smart Roku TV

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Sale Price
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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 6/16/2026, 09:19 PM
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Top Comments

oceanone
1355 Posts
290 Reputation
here is an review of it. i dont know how it is compare to an 2024-2026 TCL , ONN , Vizio ?


f you are old enough to remember when Pioneer made the "Kuro" plasma TV—the Mona Lisa of televisions that cost as much as a used Honda Civic—let me stop you right there. This is not that TV.

The Pioneer PN65-R851-26U is what industry experts call a "Zombie Brand" product. Pioneer (the audio legends) licensed their name to Compal Electronics (a massive factory that makes everything else), and Best Buy put it on a shelf with a price tag that screams, "I am a bargain."

But here is the twist: It's actually pretty good at its main job.

While it lacks the bells and whistles of a $2,000 OLED, this TV leans heavily on the Roku Operating System to deliver a surprisingly competent, user-friendly experience. It is a massive, 65-inch vessel for streaming apps, designed for people who value screen size and simplicity over cinematic perfection.

1. Usability Test
The hardware here is basic, but the software is world-class. In the budget TV sector, the Operating System (OS) matters more than the pixels, and Roku is the undisputed king of "it just works."

The Experience
The PN65-R851-26U feels less like a traditional TV and more like a dedicated, web-based app portal.

Speed: Unlike Android TVs in this price range that start lagging after three months, the Roku interface remains snappy. It treats your PS5 input exactly like your Netflix app—just another tile on the grid.
The Bluetooth Hack: Hardware-wise, this TV does not have Bluetooth. That sounds like a dealbreaker in 2025, right? But Pioneer/Roku solves this with a clever web-based workaround. You use the Roku Mobile App on your phone for "Private Listening." The TV sends the audio over Wi-Fi to your phone, and your phone sends it to your AirPods. It's a software solution to a hardware problem, and it works flawlessly.
Smart Integration: It plays nice with Apple AirPlay 2 and HomeKit. You can yell at Siri to turn off your Pioneer TV, and it actually listens.
Usability Score: 9/10 (Grandma-proof).

2. Capabilities & Testing: The Hardware Reality Check
We put the specs under the microscope. Here is what happens when you strip away the marketing fluff.

The Display: Big, Sharp, and Dark(ish)
The Good: It's a Direct-Lit LED panel, meaning the light is behind the screen, not just on the edges. This makes the brightness relatively uniform. It uses a VA Panel, which provides great contrast and deep blacks—as long as you are sitting directly in front of it.
The Bad: If you sit 30 degrees to the side, the colours wash out. Also, while it supports HDR10, don't expect fireworks. With a peak brightness of around 300 nits, it can read the HDR signal, but it can't get bright enough to truly show it. It's like a Toyota Corolla with a "Sport" button; it tries, but we know what's under the hood.
Missing in Action: There is No Dolby Vision and No Local Dimming. Blacks are dark gray in a pitch-black room.
Gaming Performance
The Verdict: It's fine for Mario Kart.
The Limitation: The HDMI ports are standard 2.0b. This means you are locked at 60Hz. If you own a PS5 or Xbox Series X and demand 120fps gaming or Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), this TV will bottleneck your console.
Audio: Please Buy a Soundbar
The down-firing speakers sound exactly like you'd expect: hollow and sad. They fire sound into your TV stand. Because this TV saves you so much money, take $100 of those savings and buy a soundbar. The HDMI ARC port makes setting one up instant.

3. The Quirks (Funny & Informative)
Every budget TV has a personality. Here is what you need to know before you wrestle this 35lb plastic beast out of the box.

The "Fat Feet" Problem: The stand legs (calipers) are positioned at the far edges of the screen. You need a TV stand that is at least 57 inches wide. If you put this on a tiny IKEA table, it will fall off.
The "Exorcism" Reboot: Some users report the TV getting stuck in a "boot loop" or turning on by itself at night (spooky, right?). It's usually a cache issue. The fix is a "Hard Reset" sequence on the remote that looks like a cheat code: Home x5, Up, Rewind x2, Fast Forward x2. Memorize this. It saves lives.
The Infrared Remote: The remote is not "point-anywhere." You must point it directly at the Pioneer logo. If your new soundbar blocks the bottom of the TV, the remote won't work. It's 1990s tech in a 4K world.
Final Verdict: The "Guest Room" King
The Pioneer PN65-R851-26U is a triumph of pragmatism. It cuts every corner that the average user won't notice (plastic build, lack of 120Hz, no Dolby Vision) to deliver the two things they do notice: Size and Streaming.

Buy this TV if:

You want a massive screen for under $400.
You hate complicated menus and just want to watch Netflix.
You are putting a TV in a bedroom, playroom, or rental property.
Avoid this TV if:

You are a hardcore gamer needing 120Hz.
You are a cinephile who demands perfect HDR highlights.
You have a narrow TV stand.
It's not the Pioneer of old, but for the price of a high-end toaster, it's a fantastic window to the internet.
GoldenDad21
195 Posts
83 Reputation
Oh Pioneer, what have they done to you?
FYI for anyone born before 1990...this is not the Pioneer you grew up with. I believe they're made by TCL. I'm not saying that's a deal breaker but just be aware that the name was sold off and it's no longer a mid-tier brand.
locuraboy
4 Posts
10 Reputation
Pioneer, Technics, Aiwa, ...long gone sadly

44 Comments

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May 19, 2026 12:52 PM
59 Posts
Joined Jun 2018

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

May 19, 2026 02:56 PM
195 Posts
Joined Apr 2019
GoldenDad21May 19, 2026 02:56 PM
195 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank GoldenDad21

Oh Pioneer, what have they done to you?
FYI for anyone born before 1990...this is not the Pioneer you grew up with. I believe they're made by TCL. I'm not saying that's a deal breaker but just be aware that the name was sold off and it's no longer a mid-tier brand.
5
4
3
May 19, 2026 03:30 PM
4 Posts
Joined Oct 2019
locuraboyMay 19, 2026 03:30 PM
4 Posts
Quote from GoldenDad21 :
Oh Pioneer, what have they done to you?
FYI for anyone born before 1990...this is not the Pioneer you grew up with. I believe they're made by TCL. I'm not saying that's a deal breaker but just be aware that the name was sold off and it's no longer a mid-tier brand.
Pioneer, Technics, Aiwa, ...long gone sadly
1
May 19, 2026 08:16 PM
35 Posts
Joined May 2026
ThriftyKnob264May 19, 2026 08:16 PM
35 Posts
What I have heard as well... very sad. Anyone have one of their Stereo set ups prior to that? BEST EVER!!!! Wish I knew what happened to my Brother's!
1
May 19, 2026 08:50 PM
694 Posts
Joined Dec 2012
InRainbowsMay 19, 2026 08:50 PM
694 Posts
Quote from GoldenDad21 :
Oh Pioneer, what have they done to you?
FYI for anyone born before 1990...this is not the Pioneer you grew up with. I believe they're made by TCL. I'm not saying that's a deal breaker but just be aware that the name was sold off and it's no longer a mid-tier brand.
Is TCL bad quality now? I remember in the early 2010s, they made solid quality budget 1080p LCDs.
May 19, 2026 09:25 PM
52 Posts
Joined Jan 2025
SeriousVolcano1642May 19, 2026 09:25 PM
52 Posts
Nice deal
1
May 19, 2026 09:27 PM
38 Posts
Joined Nov 2019
StittsyMay 19, 2026 09:27 PM
38 Posts
Quote from InRainbows :
Is TCL bad quality now? I remember in the early 2010s, they made solid quality budget 1080p LCDs.
I just purchased on from Walmart last week. So far, so good. 55" for $186. My Vizio from Walmart died after 5 months (Screen issue), so I picked up the TCL on sale. It does well for movies and playing games, but I'm a casual user too.

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May 19, 2026 09:40 PM
362 Posts
Joined Jun 2023
JD713May 19, 2026 09:40 PM
362 Posts
Last month, I purchased this model 40 inch Pioneer. After setup, 2 days later it died. I returned it here: https://ibb.co/pBBp3FG9
May 19, 2026 09:40 PM
1,355 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
oceanoneMay 19, 2026 09:40 PM
1,355 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank oceanone

here is an review of it. i dont know how it is compare to an 2024-2026 TCL , ONN , Vizio ?


f you are old enough to remember when Pioneer made the "Kuro" plasma TV—the Mona Lisa of televisions that cost as much as a used Honda Civic—let me stop you right there. This is not that TV.

The Pioneer PN65-R851-26U is what industry experts call a "Zombie Brand" product. Pioneer (the audio legends) licensed their name to Compal Electronics (a massive factory that makes everything else), and Best Buy put it on a shelf with a price tag that screams, "I am a bargain."

But here is the twist: It's actually pretty good at its main job.

While it lacks the bells and whistles of a $2,000 OLED, this TV leans heavily on the Roku Operating System to deliver a surprisingly competent, user-friendly experience. It is a massive, 65-inch vessel for streaming apps, designed for people who value screen size and simplicity over cinematic perfection.

1. Usability Test
The hardware here is basic, but the software is world-class. In the budget TV sector, the Operating System (OS) matters more than the pixels, and Roku is the undisputed king of "it just works."

The Experience
The PN65-R851-26U feels less like a traditional TV and more like a dedicated, web-based app portal.

Speed: Unlike Android TVs in this price range that start lagging after three months, the Roku interface remains snappy. It treats your PS5 input exactly like your Netflix app—just another tile on the grid.
The Bluetooth Hack: Hardware-wise, this TV does not have Bluetooth. That sounds like a dealbreaker in 2025, right? But Pioneer/Roku solves this with a clever web-based workaround. You use the Roku Mobile App on your phone for "Private Listening." The TV sends the audio over Wi-Fi to your phone, and your phone sends it to your AirPods. It's a software solution to a hardware problem, and it works flawlessly.
Smart Integration: It plays nice with Apple AirPlay 2 and HomeKit. You can yell at Siri to turn off your Pioneer TV, and it actually listens.
Usability Score: 9/10 (Grandma-proof).

2. Capabilities & Testing: The Hardware Reality Check
We put the specs under the microscope. Here is what happens when you strip away the marketing fluff.

The Display: Big, Sharp, and Dark(ish)
The Good: It's a Direct-Lit LED panel, meaning the light is behind the screen, not just on the edges. This makes the brightness relatively uniform. It uses a VA Panel, which provides great contrast and deep blacks—as long as you are sitting directly in front of it.
The Bad: If you sit 30 degrees to the side, the colours wash out. Also, while it supports HDR10, don't expect fireworks. With a peak brightness of around 300 nits, it can read the HDR signal, but it can't get bright enough to truly show it. It's like a Toyota Corolla with a "Sport" button; it tries, but we know what's under the hood.
Missing in Action: There is No Dolby Vision and No Local Dimming. Blacks are dark gray in a pitch-black room.
Gaming Performance
The Verdict: It's fine for Mario Kart.
The Limitation: The HDMI ports are standard 2.0b. This means you are locked at 60Hz. If you own a PS5 or Xbox Series X and demand 120fps gaming or Variable Refresh Rate (VRR), this TV will bottleneck your console.
Audio: Please Buy a Soundbar
The down-firing speakers sound exactly like you'd expect: hollow and sad. They fire sound into your TV stand. Because this TV saves you so much money, take $100 of those savings and buy a soundbar. The HDMI ARC port makes setting one up instant.

3. The Quirks (Funny & Informative)
Every budget TV has a personality. Here is what you need to know before you wrestle this 35lb plastic beast out of the box.

The "Fat Feet" Problem: The stand legs (calipers) are positioned at the far edges of the screen. You need a TV stand that is at least 57 inches wide. If you put this on a tiny IKEA table, it will fall off.
The "Exorcism" Reboot: Some users report the TV getting stuck in a "boot loop" or turning on by itself at night (spooky, right?). It's usually a cache issue. The fix is a "Hard Reset" sequence on the remote that looks like a cheat code: Home x5, Up, Rewind x2, Fast Forward x2. Memorize this. It saves lives.
The Infrared Remote: The remote is not "point-anywhere." You must point it directly at the Pioneer logo. If your new soundbar blocks the bottom of the TV, the remote won't work. It's 1990s tech in a 4K world.
Final Verdict: The "Guest Room" King
The Pioneer PN65-R851-26U is a triumph of pragmatism. It cuts every corner that the average user won't notice (plastic build, lack of 120Hz, no Dolby Vision) to deliver the two things they do notice: Size and Streaming.

Buy this TV if:

You want a massive screen for under $400.
You hate complicated menus and just want to watch Netflix.
You are putting a TV in a bedroom, playroom, or rental property.
Avoid this TV if:

You are a hardcore gamer needing 120Hz.
You are a cinephile who demands perfect HDR highlights.
You have a narrow TV stand.
It's not the Pioneer of old, but for the price of a high-end toaster, it's a fantastic window to the internet.
7
2
May 19, 2026 10:26 PM
43 Posts
Joined Jun 2017
carlos.eMay 19, 2026 10:26 PM
43 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank carlos.e

Beware of this junk. It failed in less than a month and cannot return it.
3
May 19, 2026 11:00 PM
9,363 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
LEOMHK1.0May 19, 2026 11:00 PM
9,363 Posts
Quote from GoldenDad21 :
Oh Pioneer, what have they done to you?
FYI for anyone born before 1990...this is not the Pioneer you grew up with. I believe they're made by TCL. I'm not saying that's a deal breaker but just be aware that the name was sold off and it's no longer a mid-tier brand.
It wouldn't be bad if Pioneer & Sanyo TVs were rebranded TCL TVs but they're subcontracted to lowest bidders Chinese factories.
Last edited by LEOMHK1.0 May 25, 2026 at 03:55 PM.
May 20, 2026 01:25 AM
697 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
kokoloMay 20, 2026 01:25 AM
697 Posts
Quote from Stittsy :
I just purchased on from Walmart last week. So far, so good. 55" for $186. My Vizio from Walmart died after 5 months (Screen issue), so I picked up the TCL on sale. It does well for movies and playing games, but I'm a casual user too.
Do you have a link for the TCL? Thx!
May 20, 2026 02:30 AM
11,334 Posts
Joined Jun 2004
rly723May 20, 2026 02:30 AM
11,334 Posts
Among budget brands seems like tcl and Hisense are best of that tier. Not sure I trust Pioneer, Onn, Westinghouse etc
May 20, 2026 02:31 AM
52 Posts
Joined Sep 2009
emmfc8May 20, 2026 02:31 AM
52 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank emmfc8

Quote from carlos.e :
Beware of this junk. It failed in less than a month and cannot return it.
Can't return to Best Buy?
2

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May 20, 2026 04:59 AM
12 Posts
Joined Jul 2023
ScarletWallaby969May 20, 2026 04:59 AM
12 Posts
Quote from locuraboy :
Pioneer, Technics, Aiwa, ...long gone sadly
Sanyo, Crown, Silver and Panasonic all made in Japan were considered "working class".... Pioneer and Sony were top, as well as Nakamichi....And these days my Pioneer stereo from 1984 is still unsurpassed by all those bells and whistles

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