this post was submitted on 20 Jan 2026
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Makes sense, bc idk anybody with a Sony TV anymore. Even loyalist fans friends of mine from the CRT days switched.
Every friend or acquaintance that has asked me "What TV should I get if I want a really nice LCD TV?" was always told Sony, so I know lots of people with them. I guess I have no good answer for these people now, every brand other than Sony had become enshittified.
I honestly don't mind TCL, they've really come a long way, especially for the price! I have the 2022 TCL 85R655 that was rated extremely well, and supported all the Series X features (ALLM, VRR, 4K/120, HDR10 +DV gaming, etc for $1800) and that only replaced my 2016 LG 65UH8500 because, well, way better specs (minus no 3D anymore lol).
I had an issue with the PCB 12 months into warranty (literal days left) and I got a full refund because they had already replaced that model with the next Gen and didn't have the proper parts available or something to fix.
The picture quality, when calibrated, is pretty damn good despite not being OLED.
The higher end TCL have very good specs, but my issue is only with the software. At this point I've been leaning towards "dumb" TVs. My most recent TV is not a smart TV and can't be retroactively ruined with ads or additional spyware. I just wish there were high end models available for when my larger living TV bites the dust.
Ah, see, ok, that makes sense. I forget most everyone else in the real world isn't obsessed with ad-blocking like me. So, this one is Roku but I have others that are Fire TV and Android (all TCL). None are connected online, and honestly it's creepy as FUCK that the fire TV has never been connected to the Internet, yet still somehow has its own ads for shows update every so often. IDK if they're cross-communication like a mesh network of TVs so if one is offline it can still get some sort of content refresh, or what, but I don't like that it knows to update/refresh with no network.
Amazon does have a patent specifically for that sort of mesh-like communication, so it is possible. The TCLs I have/had were Roku based, but kept getting worse and worse until I gave one away and reset and disconnected the other. I also refuse to see ads, but that wasn't really an issue because I didn't use any services that showed ads. Then the TVs themselves started to and I was done. I think many of the manufacturers are getting wise to the "never connecting" trend and making it more and more obnoxious. It wouldn't surprise me at all if most TVs started becoming unbearably naggy until you connect it to an internet connection. A friend of mine also recently got another TCL TV, this one being Amazon Fire based. Apparently, it was so bad he just gave it away within the first couple of months (it was a really cheap TV).
Probably the F35 series. I grabbed a 55" for outside for $219 lol. It's just for hanging out in the hot tub or grilling out.
Edit: wonder if that Amazon shit can be blocked
His was a 42" he got for around $100, ludicrously cheap, but after using it he saw why.