On paper, the panel is well-equipped: 4K QLED, 400 nits brightness, Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG, and wide colour support (99.2% NTSC, DCI-P3, Adobe RGB, and BT.2020). In practice, it delivers an entertaining and balanced picture when viewed head-on. Colours pop without looking cartoonish, motion is well-managed thanks to Vu’s granular settings, and HDR content looks appropriately punchy.
The Achilles heel? Off-axis performance. Move a couple of seats over and contrast falls off sharply, leaving you with a flatter, washed-out image. Stay in the sweet spot, though, and the Vibe DV rewards you. In Dolby Vision mode, Apple TV+’s Chief of War showed its high-contrast battle scenes without smearing fine details, and Wednesday’s dim, moody palette stayed coherent without crushing blacks into oblivion. But the darker scenes also allow for the edge backlighting to be visible around the borders, giving away its budget background. The TV truly holds its own against more expensive competition when it comes to motion processing and Dolby Vision performance. Calibration nerds will appreciate the full suite of RGB, white balance, and gamma controls, allowing fine-tuning for those willing to spend an afternoon with a meter and calibration software. Although it’s hard to imagine anyone going to such lengths for casual viewing.