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  1. Table of Contents
  2. Top
  3. Main Differences
  4. Design
    1. Style
    2. Accelerated Longevity Test
    3. Stand
    4. Back
    5. Borders
    6. Thickness
    7. Build Quality
  5. Picture Quality
    1. Contrast
    2. Blooming
    3. Lighting Zone Transitions
    4. Contrast And Dark Details In Game Mode
    5. HDR Brightness
    6. HDR Brightness In Game Mode
    7. PQ EOTF Tracking
    8. SDR Brightness
    9. Color Gamut
    10. Color Volume
    11. Pre Calibration
    12. Post Calibration
    13. Gray Uniformity
    14. Black Uniformity
    15. Viewing Angle
    16. Reflections
    17. HDR Native Gradient
    18. Low-Quality Content Smoothing
    19. Upscaling: Sharpness Processing
    20. Pixels
  6. Motion
    1. Response Time
    2. Flicker-Free
    3. Black Frame Insertion (BFI)
    4. Motion Interpolation
    5. Stutter
    6. 24p Judder
    7. Variable Refresh Rate
  7. Inputs
    1. Input Lag
    2. Supported Resolutions
    3. PS5 Compatibility
    4. Xbox Series X|S Compatibility
    5. Inputs Specifications
    6. Input Photos
    7. Total Inputs
    8. Audio Passthrough
  8. Sound Quality
    1. Frequency Response
    2. Distortion
  9. Smart Features
    1. Interface
    2. Ad-Free
    3. Apps and Features
    4. Remote
    5. TV Controls
    6. In The Box
    7. Misc
  10. Comments

Sony A95K OLED vs Samsung S89C OLED

Side-by-Side Comparison

Products

Sony A95K OLED
Samsung S89C OLED

Tested using Methodology v1.11

Updated Apr 16, 2025 04:14 PM

SEE PRICE
Amazon.com

Tested using Methodology v1.11

Updated Nov 07, 2024 06:57 PM

SEE PRICE
Amazon.com
Sony A95K OLED Picture
Samsung S89C OLED Picture

Variants

  • XR-55A95K (55")
  • XR-65A95K (65")
  • QN77S89CBFXZA (77")

Our Verdict

Sony A95K OLED

Samsung S89C OLED

The Sony A95K is better than the Samsung S89C OLED. The Sony TV has significantly better image processing when dealing with low-quality or low-resolution content, so cable TV channels and streaming movies look much better, with less macro-blocking and pixelization. The Sony also includes Dolby Vision support, so it's great if you're a movie buff who wants to try out the format. The Samsung is more versatile, especially for gamers, as it has lower input lag and four high-bandwidth HDMI 2.1 ports, whereas the Sony only has two.

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