The C5 is LG's most popular OLED TV, sitting right in between the super pricey Gallery Series (G5) and the budget B5. The C5 boasts the near-infinite black levels, near-infinite contrast ratio, and near-instantaneous response times you'd expect from any OLED TV. It's also equipped with LG's proprietary Evo panel, which is significantly brighter and offers a wider color gamut than traditional W-OLED TVs. This is the best TV for streaming 4K HDR content in its intended glory.
LG's OLED TVs have also been our favorite TVs for console gaming for three years running thanks to their outstanding image quality, low input lag, and high refresh rate. The C5 is equipped with modern gaming features, including a native 120Hz panel that can be pushed to as high as 144Hz, four HDMI 2.1 inputs for running PS5 games in 4K at up to 120fps, variable refresh rate and auto low latency mode.
65" Samsung S90F 4K QD-OLED TV for $1,299.99
The S90F is the 2025 model in Samsung's S90 OLED TV lineup. If you were to compare Samsung's TVs with LG's TVs, the Samsung S90F would be comparable to the LG Evo C5. It's equipped with a quantum dot OLED panel, which is only found in Samsung's higher end OLED TVs. QD OLED TVs are brighter and have a wider color gamut than traditional W-OLED TVs while retaining all of the other benefits like the near instantaneous response time, true black levels, and near-infinite contrast ratio. This is easily the best TV for streaming 4K HDR content in its intended glory.
Like the LG Evo C5, the Samsung S90F also has the features you'd want in a current gen gaming TV, including a native 120Hz panel that is boostable to 144Hz, four HDMI 2.1 inputs, VRR, and ALLM.
Are these TVs good for Nintendo Switch 2?
Despite being a current generation console, the Nintendo Switch 2 has lax TV requirements compared to the PS5 or Xbox Series X. When the Switch is connected to its dock and a television, it is only capable of outputting a 4K resolution signal at up to 60 frames per second. It can go up to 120fps if the resolution drops to 1080p, but the data rate required for both these options is pretty much the same, and you would much rather play any game in 4K. That said, the Switch 2 will still benefit greatly from the OLED panel's stellar image quality (much like how the Switch OLED was a substantial visual upgrade from the original Switch).
Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn't hunting for deals for other people at work, he's hunting for deals for himself during his free time.
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