How we source the verdicts
Verdicts on this site are based on public reference material across the consumer-display landscape. The publishers below are representative of the kind of source that informs our positioning, not an exhaustive extraction map per claim. A specific verdict on a specific page is not necessarily anchored to a single named publisher.
Sources
- Manufacturer published spec sheets. Samsung, LG, Sony, Panasonic, TCL, Hisense, and Philips (Europe) annual line spec disclosures are the authoritative source for nominal panel type, peak brightness claims, and feature support per model.
- Professional review outlets. RTINGS.com (independent measurement-based reviews), Wirecutter, CNET, PCMag, Forbes Vetted, HDTVTest (Vincent Teoh), and FlatpanelsHD provide measured performance data (contrast, peak brightness measured, colour-volume, input lag, motion handling).
- Display industry technical reports. DisplayMate technical analysis (when published), Display Specifications database, OLED-info industry coverage, OLED.at panel-supply analysis.
- Practitioner survey data. AVS Forum and Reddit r/4kTV technical-discussion threads, Reddit r/OLED long-running burn-in field reports, Tom's Guide aggregated reader feedback.
How verdicts are constructed
For each comparison axis (perfect black, peak brightness, motion, viewing angle, burn-in risk, lifespan, gaming features), we read the named source landscape, identify where the technologies meaningfully differ, and publish a verdict. Where a verdict swings on use-case (e.g. dark movie room favours OLED; bright sports living-room favours QLED with mini-LED), we name the use-case explicitly rather than picking a winner overall.
Tier-by-tier picks (entry, mid, premium) are based on the model lines published by manufacturers each year. We update the picks when the new line ships, or when measured-review data overturns the prior pick.
What we deliberately do not publish
- Personal subjective "best TV" claims. The best TV depends on the room, the use case, and the budget. Single-pick "best TV of 2026" lists are not published; tier-and-use-case picks are.
- Marketing-spec brightness numbers. Manufacturer peak-brightness claims (4,000 nit etc.) are often measured with non-standard test patterns. We reference RTINGS-measured peak brightness when describing real-world brightness performance.
- Side-by-side feature grids. Feature parity changes year-over-year per model line; static grids are stale within months.
Update cadence
Verdicts and picks update only when the underlying reality changes. Triggers:
- New annual TV lines (Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, Hisense announce in spring; ship through summer / autumn).
- New panel technology generations (QD-OLED revisions, MLA-OLED, micro-LED commercialisation, mini-LED dimming-zone count progression).
- Material movement in measured peak brightness, colour volume, or burn-in field reports.
- OLED-panel cost / price-band shifts that alter tier positioning.
Affiliate disclosure
No affiliate links are currently active on this site. If affiliate links are added in the future, they will be clearly disclosed in line with FTC and ASA guidance. Affiliate revenue would not influence verdicts: where a non-affiliate retailer is the best option, that would be the recommendation.
Editorial position
This site is operated by Digital Signet, an independent AI-development studio. We do not sell TVs, do not act as a retailer, do not run an audio-visual installation practice, and do not accept paid placements from Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, Hisense or any other display manufacturer. See /about for the operator and the wider network.
Contact
For methodology questions, corrections, or scenarios that don't fit cleanly: oliver@digitalsignet.com.