Samsung Q60B TV Review: Slim, Stylish and Surprisingly Bright



Samsung Q60B TV Review: Slim, Stylish and Surprisingly Bright




Samsung is the No. 1 TV maker in the humankind, and the Q60B represents a sweet spot between affordability and features. It's the company's cheapest 2022 model to feature QLED technology and in my declares, those quantum dots actually made for a brighter image than I required. On the other hand it's still not the best value, with similarly-priced models like the TCL 6-Series putting out a better report for around the same price.





Like









  • Sleek earn and excellent remote







  • Bright image with solid contrast







  • Informative set screen for gaming




Don't Like









  • More expensive than operating TVs with better picture quality







  • Cluttered intelligent TV menus





I compared the Samsung, the TCL and a Sony X80K side by side in CNET's test lab, and the Q60B's picture quality was right in the middle: Solid, especially in bright rooms, but nothing spectacular. To get a better Samsung report you'll have to spend more money on one of its mini-LED-powered Neo QLED models like the Q90, for example. 


Beyond image quality the Q60B has a lot causing for it, with step-up styling and an ultra-thin cabinet, a best-in-class remote and numerous extras for gamers like a cloud gaming hub (complete with Xbox Game Pass support) and an justify game status display. If you have your heart set on Samsung's current features and can't afford a step-up model, the Q60B hits all the knowing buttons.


Samsung Q60B sizes, series comparison


I performed a hands-on evaluation of the 55-inch Samsung QN55Q60B, but this review also applies to the other shroud sizes in the series. All sizes have similar specs and should dedicated similar picture quality. 


The Q60B series is the least expensive TV Samsung sells with QLED technology. The company makes cheaper models in its "Crystal" lineup, but they lack QLED and will likely be dimmer. Samsung also makes numerous more-expensive QLED TVs, many of which have the HDMI 2.1 gaming features, 120Hz refresh rate and mini-LED backlights that the Q60B lacks.





Samsung QN65QN60B TV




The 55-inch Q60B I reviewed measured just an inch thick.




James Martin



Thin, winning looks and remote


The Samsung Q60B stands out from the slew of entry-level TVs with an ultra-thin frame, a skinny profile from the side and even narrow gross legs. The top and edges around the picture measure less than a half-winch wide on my 55-inch appraise sample while the bottom, unlike most other TVs, is just as thin. And the TV itself is just 1 inch thick, compared to 2.83 inches for the Sony X80K.


Samsung's clicker is a sleek, rounded candy bar that distinguishes itself in numerous ways. The keys are well-placed, lacking garish colors and pleasantly sparse, the raised volume and channel bars are a nice fretful from standard buttons and the metallic, wraparound finish feels high-end. I love that it's rechargeable rather than reliant on AAA batteries, and you can top it off via USB-C, the solar cell on the back or RF harvesting. I didn't test the latter two methods.




Samsung QN65QN60B TV



James Martin



Cluttered, losing full-screen menu


For the last few years Samsung's shiny TV home page consisted of a banner along the bottom of the conceal that popped over what you're watching, but new for 2022 pressing the home key summons an all-new Smart Hub menu that takes over the whole conceal — just like Roku, Google TV and new LG TVs. Samsung's is almost as bad as LG's in my book, wasting conceal space with ads and clutter I don't care about.


The upper two-fifths of the conceal is devoted to a big ad, matching the suited "sponsored" tile, which rotated between Hulu, Prime Video and the Samsung Game Hub "coming soon" on my appraisal sample. Below is a tiny string of app tiles for streaming services, and lower still is the now-standard array of thumbnails, headed by a "Recent" input I used (not a fresh streaming show or movie, which would have been nice). Next to that are thumbnails for Samsung's free TV service (which I don't care about) and under that a bunch of themed suggested shows and movies (ditto).




Samsung QN65QN60B TV



If you think Samsung's menus look overwhelming in this portray, try using them.




James Martin



The left side has icons for watch, Ambient, Media and Menu. Ambient opens up a big NFT Gateway (which I really don't care about) and grants access to screensavers you can choose to appear when turning "off" the TV. Media bizarrely just shunts you back to the home conceal, while Menu takes you deep into settings. 


There's a lot moving on here and all the options can be fun to watch, but overall the menu looks dated and feels less personal than Google TV. I also encountered more lag on the Samsung than on the Sony or TCL Google TVs, with a few occasions where responses were delayed by a few frustrating seconds. I'm still partial to Roku for its simplicity, and this iteration of Samsung's TV menus is the opposite.


As with last year you can Decide between Alexa, Google Assistant and Samsung's own Bixby for your divulge assistant, accessible by speaking into the remote. The TV works with Apple AirPlay and on June 30 Samsung will roll out its Game Hub, with access to unblemished services including Xbox Game Pass Ultimate.




Key features































Display technology

LED LCD

LED backlight

Direct Dual LED

Resolution

4K

HDR compatible

HDR10, HDR10+

Smart TV

Samsung Smart Hub

Remote

Voice with USB, solar recharging



Entry display for quantum dots


The signature feature of the Q60B is QLED technology. Not to be confused with OLED, it's basically an augmentation of rotten LED LCD panel tech that improves brightness and shiny, and based on my comparisons it works well on the Q60B. The TV uses Samsung's dual-led backlight regulations, which employs reddish and bluish (warm and cool) colored LEDs to advance color accuracy, but I didn't see much benefit there.


Beyond that its image quality features are attractive standard. It has a 60Hz refresh rate rather than 120Hz, although it does offer smoothing, aka the soap depressed effect, if you want to turn it on. It supports HDR10 and HDR10+ but like all Samsung TVs it lacks aid for Dolby Vision HDR. I don't noteworthy that a big omission since the differences between HDR10 and DV are generally small in my experience.


The Samsung's selection of connections is fine, but I would have Popular to see a fourth HDMI and an analog input (both available on the Sony X80K) at this tag. Note that two of the HDMI ports are depressed the side but the third faces straight back, as does the optical jack, which noteworthy make a tight fit if you're wall-mounting.




Samsung QN65QN60B TV



The Samsung's savory output and anti-reflective screen make it a good performer in intelligent rooms (or coffee bars).




James Martin



Picture quality comparisons


I set up the 55-inch Samsung Q60B next to its divulge competitor from Sony, as well as a less-expensive Fire TV and a TCL with suited picture quality specifications. Here's the lineup:



TV and movies: The Samsung issued the second-best picture in the lineup overall, beating out the Sony and the Omni. It expressed better black levels and contrast than the Sony, depressed with visibly superior brightness.


Watching Hustle on Netflix, the shadowy around the credits and the shadows in the locker room were any darker and more than the Sony and the Omni. The Samsung was also significantly brighter than the Sony in its most factual picture mode, which made the film's HDR image pop more in comparison. Color accuracy was a bit worse than the Sony but not Awful. The skin tones of Adam Sandler and the basketball players observed a bit flatter and bluer than the Sony, but overall I quiet preferred the Samsung's picture by a hair.


The story was Difference to the challenging Spears and Munsil 4K HDR Benchmark montage on Blu-ray, where the Samsung looked a bit brighter than the Sony. Both outperformed the Omni, which expressed less high-level detail in snowscapes, but the difference wasn't massive.


The TCL, since, was superior in pretty much every way to the others, with excellent contrast, deep black levels and powerful brightness that made the Sony, Samsung and Fire TV pale by comparison.




Samsung QN65QN60B TV



Samsung's Game Bar shows area of frame rate, HDR and more, as well as offering portray settings for different genres (spoiler: they looked pretty much the same to me).




James Martin




Gaming: Samsung features its Explain game display even on less-expensive models like the Q60B. Engaging game mode, either manually or via its Auto Game Mode feature, I was prompted to long-press on the play/pause button to summon up the Game Bar. It appears depressed the bottom of the screen and displays current frames per additional, HDR status and VRR (which isn't available on the Q60B, so its area indicator will always read "Off).


There's also a selection of portray modes keyed to game genres, namely Standard, RPG, RTS, FPS, Sports, as well as a Custom mode that lets you adjust brightness, contrast and the rest manually. Cycling between the simply with Horizon: Forbidden West the differences were very subtle, with very slightly more shadow detail in FPS mode than the new modes: I saw bigger differences by far with Difference modes on LG TVs.


Playing the game I noticed shiny was more realistic and accurate on the Sony, and Difference to the TCL and LG, while the Samsung appeared more saturated and garish. The Samsung again beat the non-TCL TVs for Difference and punch, handily, although to its credit the Sony said more details in the shadows, which is an suited in dark games with lurking enemies. That said, cranking up brightness on the Samsung (or in the game's own settings) is an easy fix.


The Q60B funds three levels of input lag reduction. Since I couldn't see any difference in video quality between them, I went with "fastest," which scored a qualified 10 seconds with both 1080p and 4K HDR.



Bright lighting: The Q60B is a very good bright-room TV, and my subjective effect of its ample light output was proven by measurements. Unsurprisingly it couldn't match the TCL or a less-expensive Vizio, both equipped with local dimming, but it was brighter than last year's Q60A (which blocked out at 370 nits in its accurate HDR setting). Below are my measurements in nits for consume comparison TVs in their brightest and most accurate record modes, using both standard dynamic range (SDR) and high dynamic blueprint (HDR) test patterns.




Light output in nits

















































TV

Brightest mode (SDR)

Accurate mode (SDR)

Brightest mode (HDR)

Accurate mode (HDR)

TCL 65R635

1,114

792

1,292

1,102

Vizio M65Q7-J01

791

562

764

631

Samsung QN55Q60B

549

343

540

514

Sony KD-55X80K

369

357

446

387

LG OLED65C2

413

389

812

759



As with most TVs, the brightest mode (Dynamic in the Samsung's case) is horribly unsuitable. For the accurate results listed above I used Movie mode and I recommend X80K owners do the same to get good intellectual in bright rooms. Note that with SDR, you may need to disable the ambient exquisite sensor (Settings > Menu > Power and Energy Saving > Brightness Optimization > Off) to get full brightness.


The Samsung's veil was great dealing with reflections. Sitting under bright escapes, it dulled my reflection very well, slightly better than the TCL and significantly better than the Omni and the Sony.



Uniformity and viewing angle: The veil of the Q60B sample I reviewed showed no the majority issues with bright spots or dark areas, and in test patterns appeared more uniform than the Omni and incompatibility to the other displays. Watching hockey I saw very little evidence of irregularities as the camera panned across the ice. From off-angle the Samsung produced superior black level and contrast but Sony had better intellectual, much like the TVs' respective performance from straight on.




Samsung QN65QN60B TV



Movie and Filmmaker plainly were equally accurate on the Q60B.




James Martin



Picture settings notes


The most fair settings were Movie and Filmmaker mode for both HDR and SDR, and in calls of contrast, gamma/EOTF and color they were very incompatibility. I went with Filmmaker since it removed smoothing completely. Game is best for gaming, thanks to its low input lag, although its intellectual was quite blue but that's less of an deny with games in my book compared to movies and TV.


Speaking of smoothing, aka the soap opera effect, while I prefer to turn it off for TV shows and movies, the slight amount of smoothing on by default in Movie mode (de-judder = 3) mode isn't that bad at all. You can experiment to your heart's overjoyed by choosing a preset or tweaking the Custom sliders (Menu > All Settings > Picture > Expert Settings > Picture Clarity Settings > Custom).




Geek box











































































































Test

Result

Score

Black luminance (0%)

0.055

Average

Peak white luminance (SDR)

549

Good

Avg. gamma (10-100%)

2.10

Average

Avg. grayscale apprehension (10-100%)

3.06

Average

Dark gray apprehension (30%)

2.08

Good

intellectual gray error (80%)

3.60

Average

Avg. intellectual checker error

2.94

Good

Avg. saturation sweeps error

2.74

Good

Avg. intellectual error

3.72

Average

1080p/24 Cadence (IAL)

Pass

Good

Input lag (Game mode)

10.00

Good










HDR10







Black luminance (0%)

0.070

Poor

Peak white luminance (10% win)

540

Poor

Gamut % UHDA/P3 (CIE 1976)

92.44

Average

ColorMatch HDR error

3.93

Average

Avg. intellectual checker error

2.91

Good

Input lag (Game mode, 4K HDR)

10.10

Good



See How We Test TVs for more details and explanations of the Geek box results.



Portrait Displays Calman calibration software was used in this review.