Now we get to the main event. The Vision 9 is armed with a QD-Mini LED panel featuring a staggering 1920 mini LEDs — yes, that’s nearly two thousand tiny, individually dimmable light sources. This is a serious step up from regular LED TVs, and while it isn’t quite OLED, it comes perilously close in certain scenes.
Peak brightness hits a retina-frying 900 nits, giving HDR content real presence. Dolby Vision titles on Netflix and Disney+ positively glow, with punchy highlights and those deep, syrupy blacks you expect from pricier TVs. Contrast levels are excellent, with local dimming zones working overtime to prevent halo effects around bright objects. Shadows are detailed and gradients smooth, especially in tricky scenes like dimly lit nightclubs or foggy battlefields — where cheaper panels usually give up and smear everything into grey soup.
Colour reproduction is another highlight. Lumio claims a Delta E of under 1.71, and while most buyers won’t know or care what that means, in practice, it translates to wonderfully natural tones. Skin tones look human, skies don’t turn radioactive blue, and greens stay lush without looking like they belong in a cartoon. It’s factory-calibrated for accuracy out of the box, though there are enough settings to tinker if you’re so inclined.
Viewing angles are way better than a VA panel — better than expected, though colours and contrast do take a slight hit when viewed from sharp sides, but we are nitpicking now. It’s no OLED in that department, but in normal living room conditions, it holds its own admirably.