How strongly 4 sources agree — expert labs and real owners, with community voices weighted heavier. Not one reviewer’s opinion; the pattern across all of them.
- Extremely high peak brightness, best-in-class for bright room viewing
- Mini-LED backlighting with many dimming zones for strong contrast
- 144Hz panel with 4x HDMI 2.1 ports for next-gen gaming
- No Dolby Vision support, Samsung uses HDR10+ instead
- Narrower viewing angles than OLED, best viewed straight-on
- Some blooming visible in high-contrast scenes
“The only Samsungs worth buying for gaming purposes right now are the Qn90A, and the 85 inch version of the QN85A.”r/4kTV community member
Community discussion around the QN90F reveals a TV that rewards careful setup but doesn't always impress straight out of the box. One owner noted that content “looked pretty bland and washed colors until I calibrated hdr settings and increased color setting from 25 to 40-45”, suggesting the matte panel's strengths in bright rooms come with a calibration cost. Those who have seen it in person have been split, with at least one viewer concluding they would “rather get a qn90D”, while others frame the QN90F as the practical choice for buyers who need a large, glare-resistant screen now rather than waiting for next-generation pricing to settle. The longer-term question hanging over the set is whether it will “still impress in 5-7 years” compared to OLED alternatives at similar price points.
What owners love
- Extremely high peak brightness, best-in-class for bright room viewing
- Mini-LED backlighting with many dimming zones for strong contrast
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