## Trải nghiệm đỉnh cao cùng Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED: Đánh giá chi tiết & Mua ngay tại Queen Mobile!
Màn hình QD-OLED đột phá, âm thanh sống động, thiết kế sang trọng – Sony Bravia XR A95L xứng đáng là “ông hoàng” TV năm nay!
Bài đánh giá chi tiết dưới đây sẽ giúp bạn hiểu rõ hơn về những điểm mạnh, điểm yếu và lý do tại sao Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED lại được đánh giá cao đến vậy. Chúng tôi sẽ phân tích từ chất lượng hình ảnh, âm thanh, thiết kế cho đến trải nghiệm người dùng tổng thể.
(Phần này cần được bổ sung nội dung đánh giá chi tiết. Ví dụ: )
* Chất lượng hình ảnh: Công nghệ QD-OLED của Sony Bravia XR A95L mang đến màu sắc rực rỡ, độ tương phản ấn tượng, đen sâu thẳm và độ sáng cao. Hình ảnh sắc nét đến từng chi tiết, cho trải nghiệm xem phim, chơi game vô cùng chân thực. Chúng ta sẽ đi sâu vào phân tích về độ chính xác màu sắc, góc nhìn, hiệu ứng HDR… (Thêm các chi tiết đánh giá cụ thể ở đây).
* Âm thanh: Hệ thống loa tích hợp trên A95L khá ấn tượng, mang đến âm thanh sống động, mạnh mẽ, không cần thêm loa ngoài. (Thêm chi tiết đánh giá về âm bass, treble, hiệu ứng âm thanh vòm…).
* Thiết kế: Với thiết kế tinh tế, sang trọng, Sony Bravia XR A95L sẽ là điểm nhấn cho không gian giải trí của bạn. (Mô tả chi tiết về thiết kế, chất liệu…).
* Tính năng: (Mô tả các tính năng thông minh, khả năng kết nối, giao diện người dùng…).
* Ưu điểm: (Tóm tắt các ưu điểm nổi bật).
* Nhược điểm: (Nêu rõ những điểm chưa hoàn hảo, nếu có).
Kết luận:
Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED là một chiếc TV cao cấp đáng để đầu tư. Với chất lượng hình ảnh vượt trội, âm thanh sống động và thiết kế sang trọng, nó sẽ mang đến cho bạn trải nghiệm giải trí đỉnh cao. Tuy nhiên, giá thành khá cao nên bạn cần cân nhắc kỹ lưỡng trước khi quyết định mua.
Mua ngay Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED tại Queen Mobile!
Queen Mobile là nhà cung cấp uy tín các sản phẩm điện tử, đặc biệt là các sản phẩm Apple như iPhone, iPad, Smartwatch và phụ kiện. Hãy liên hệ ngay với Queen Mobile để được tư vấn và sở hữu chiếc Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED với mức giá tốt nhất! [Link website Queen Mobile]
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Giới thiệu Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED TV review
: Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED TV review
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Hãy viết đoạn tóm tắt về nội dung bằng tiếng việt kích thích người mua: Sony Bravia XR A95L QD-OLED TV review
you can buy and one of the overall.
. These revealed that the A95L’s Delta-E (which represents the difference between a color at its source and as displayed on the screen) is higher than those of its close competitors, the and , meaning its colors are slightly less accurate. As much as I think you’re unlikely to notice the difference in real-world watching (for reasons we’ll get to shortly), it’s there.
The Sony A95L had more-than-complete coverage of not just the Rec. 709 (SDR) color gamut (which we’d expect from any OLED) and thoroughly nailed the UHDA-P3 (HDR) color gamut. That’s neck and neck with last generation’s for the highest sub-100% value we’ve seen. The A95L’s coverage of the wider Rec. 2020 color gamut, but its result there was its own kind of spectacular—89.41%, just three hundredths of a point behind the A95K.
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Row 0 – Cell 0 | Sony Bravia XR A95L | LG OLED evo G3 | Samsung S95C | Sony Bravia XR A95K |
SDR Brightness (10%, in nits) | 112 | 326 | 249 | 297 |
Delta-E (lower is better) | 2.856 | 1.8611 | 1.4542 | 3.3223 |
Rec. 709 Gamut Coverage | 99.9763 | 99.7631 | 98.7273 | 110.8434 |
HDR Brightness (10%, in nits) | 1215 | 1361 | 1369 | 994 |
UHDA-P3 Gamut Coverage | 99.95 | 96.73 | 99.09 | 99.95 |
Rec. 2020 Gamut Coverage | 89.41 | 72.49 | 74.47 | 89.44 |
Input Lag (ms) | 16.1 | 12.9/9.2 | 9.2 | 16.1 |
Brightness is another matter. With HDR material, the A95L’s brightness is about 11% lower than what we saw from the LG G3 and Samsung S95C: about 1,215 nits on 10% of the screen, which is what we typically measure. Other modes do, however, get into the same 1,300-nit range as those sets, so the A95L has the capability. But with SDR, the brightness absolutely craters. On the surface, this is far from desirable — but we learned there’s a reason for it.
We typically evaluate TVs in either Filmmaker Mode, an industry-standard collection of settings designed to closely mimic the theater experience with a picture that looks almost calibrated out of the box, or the closest equivalent the TV offers. The A95L’s most accurate mode is what Sony calls Professional: It’s similar to Filmmaker but designed to match the characteristics of the BVM-HX310 Professional Master Monitor, a piece of Hollywood-level hardware intended to provide flawless color fidelity and full-screen HDR brightness — and that retails for prices starting around $25,000.
In other words, Sony intends the A95L to be dimmer overall in Professional mode, which explains both our HDR and SDR results (the latter being 112 nits, the lowest we’ve seen from any major TV in the last two years). This isn’t exclusively bad: It balances the picture differently, compensating somewhat for the lower color accuracy, and you always have the option of activating the built-in environmental adjustment features or switching to, say, Standard or Cinema modes, which we measured as much brighter (273 and 315 nits, respectively) but have less accurate and oversaturated SDR colors. It’s just one thing you’ll want to take into account if you’re thinking of buying the A95L.
Sony Bravia XR A95L review: Audio
In recent years, we’ve held up higher-end Sony models as examples of what TV audio can be at its best. These use a technology called Acoustic Surface Audio+ to transform the screen itself into a speaker and make the sound appear to be emanating from exactly that part of the picture. The A95L, which also uses this technology, sounds every bit as good as its predecessors.
Whether on heavily throbbing bass tracks (like The Knife’s “Silent Shout”) or more treble-focused extravaganzas, like the soprano test track I use that crests to a high B-flat, the A95L brings unprecedented clarity to TV audio. If this set may not get as loud as others (it was a noticeable comedown from the brick-splitting Hisense UX), it still gets room-fillingly loud and with a crystalline quality far beyond what you get with any other standard TV audio technology, whether you’re enjoying music tracks or watching a movie with an intensely layered soundtrack. This technology, as well as support for Dolby Atmos, means this is one of the exceedingly rare cases where listening to the TV is just about as good as watching it — high praise indeed when a picture looks as good as the A95L’s does.
This is one of the exceedingly rare cases where listening to the TV is just about as good as watching it.
That said, you can augment the A95L with an external speaker, such as one of our (and Sony makes a number of them scaled to different price points). But unless you’re outfitting a literal home theater, you won’t feel shortchanged by how this TV sounds.
Sony Bravia XR A95L review: Gaming
Perhaps the biggest performance letdown of the A95L is its input lag. With our Leo Bodnar 4K Input Lag tester, we measured 16.1ms. That’s below our basic 20ms threshold, so acceptable, but well above what we’ve seen from competing sets from LG and Samsung (which easily get below 10ms). This isn’t uncommon with Sony TVs, but it’s still an unfortunate hiccup on a TV that otherwise gets so many details so right.
That said, games look predictably wonderful on the A95L (we were blown away by both and ), and there’s no shortage of gaming tools. In addition to 4K120Hz, VRR and ALLM (all conferred through the two HDMI 2.1 ports), hooking up a lets you activate two Perfect for PlayStation 5 features: Auto Genre Picture Mode, which automatically changes picture modes to maximize game performance and visual quality, and Auto HDR Tone Mapping, for automatically optimizing the PS5’s HDR settings.
When the TV is in Game mode, you can press the remote’s Menu button to view a game bar that provides you with technical information about the picture and gives you a new array of gaming capabilities. As of this writing in early November 2023, these include Dolby Vision Game, VRR, motion blur reduction, black equalizer and crosshair (which puts one in the center of the screen to help you aim).
Two other potentially compelling features are planned for future firmware updates. One is an A95L exclusive: MultiView, so you can play games on one side of the screen while watching video content (with some limitations) on the other. The second lets you shrink down your gaming window so you can view it more the way you would a computer monitor. We’re looking forward to trying these features once they’re available.
Sony Bravia XR A95L review: Smart features
Google TV remains one of the finest smart TV interfaces on the market. Integrating the power of Google Search with a TV was a no-brainer, and it could hardly be implemented better. It has the capability to draw on your searches and preferences from other devices such as your phone and computer, and thus surface interesting things you might find elsewhere. As a result, Google TV’s recommendations are uncommonly good — almost invariably stuff I would want to sit down gorge on.
There’s an ultraclean interface, too, with a top navigation bar that lets you instantly access live TV, a sprawling app collection, your “library” (of content drawn from elsewhere and everywhere on the Web), and, perhaps self-indulgently, a catalog of Sony’s own branded programming. Otherwise, on the main For You page, you can easily page through a carousel of new options, top picks for you, your app collection, things you’re in the middle of viewing, and a number of other curated lists of things you might want to see—all of which are relevant in a way that’s almost unheard of for TV recommendations.
The Bravia cam analyzes your specific viewing environment — not just the amount of light, but how many people are in the room and where they’re sitting — to tweak the picture and sound in real time so everyone is experiencing the TV at its best.
Unlikely as it is that you’ll ever run out of things to watch this way, an integrated ATSC 3.0 tuner will let you view over-the-air 4K broadcasts and you can stream using Chromecast or Apple AirPlay. And in addition to using Google Assistant with either the remote’s microphone or the TV’s far-field microphone, other smart home compatibility includes Amazon Alexa and Apple HomeKit.
Sony doesn’t stop there, of course. It begins by adding in Bravia Core, which is its own proprietary streaming service providing high-bitrate versions of its own licensed movies and TV shows. Some are free, and some you have to purchase, and the A95L includes credits to buy 10, which is a nice addition if you like what’s available. During our review period, major recent films included Spider-Man: Across the Spider and Gran Turismo, but these were exceptions rather than the rule. Bravia Core isn’t exactly loaded with a ton of major, scintillating titles. It’s whipped cream on top of an ice cream sundae, but not a major attractor in its own right.
The same could be said of the Bravia Cam. This device costs $199.99 if you want to buy it separately for use with other Sony TVs, but it comes bundled with the A95L. As its name suggests, it’s a camera that connects to a port on the top rear of the TV and adds tons of functionality to the TV-watching experience. There’s video conferencing. But it’s also the focal point for Sony’s environmental adjustment features: The Bravia cam analyzes your specific viewing environment — not just the amount of light, but how many people are in the room and where they’re sitting — to tweak the picture and sound in real time so everyone is experiencing the TV at its best.
Luckily, these features are easy to turn on and off in the menus, and it’s still not the same as a full calibration for your unique viewing location and preferences, but it’s a nice option that handles this idea better than most other TVs you can buy. The Bravia Cam also adds things like a proximity sensor, so your kids can be warned if they get too close to the screen, and, most intriguing, gesture controls so you can perform basic TV functions just by moving your hands in front of the camera. (There is a built-in training system for you to get the hang of this.)
My feelings about the Bravia Cam remain more or less the same as when I first used it with the A95K: It’s fun but trivial, and the gesture controls still need polishing to become real game-changers. Still, all this shows where TV is likely to be going, and it’s fun to be at the forefront of it.
Sony Bravia XR A95L: Remote
Though Sony has greatly streamlined its remote over the last generation, turning out a smaller and sleeker version that’s a better match for its TVs, the Premium Remote included with the A95L is a step even beyond that. Unlike its standard, basic black model, this one features a cool, brushed-metal top panel and full backlighting that makes every button perfectly visible in any lighting conditions.
The two big additions to this version of the remote are two shortcut buttons: one for YouTube (a welcome return) and one for the anime-focused streaming service Crunchyroll, which join the other shortcuts for Bravia Core, Netflix, Disney+ and Amazon Prime Video.
Other than that, this is a fairly normal remote with a tidy (but not too tidy) collection of well-organized buttons, including one for quickly connecting with Google Assistant. I’m still less than convinced that there need to be three buttons to raise menus: one with a wrench for opening the quick settings, one (labeled with Menu) that opens a context-sensitive list of options, and a Gear button for changing all the TV’s settings. You’ll get used to this in time, but it can be a little confusing at first.
Sony Bravia XR A95L: Verdict
There’s no way around it: The Sony Bravia A95L is a great TV with a superlative picture and top-notch sound, mated with the outstanding Google TV interface and a cornucopia of other exciting, useful options. Few other TVs give you quite as much, packaged as well, as the A95L.
That said, it’s not hard to nitpick. The approach to brightness in Professional mode won’t be to everyone’s taste. The colors could be more accurate. Having only two HDMI 2.1 ports is a little stingy. And input lag is on the high side.
But the A95L’s impressive treatment of HDR color and its seemingly bottomless well of handy features and extras ensure that it belongs alongside the LG G3 and the Samsung S95C as the top TVs of this generation. Whether it should be your first choice depends on what you want from a TV, and what you may be willing to give up to get it. Overall, the Sony A95L is a real winner and worthy of your attention if you’re shopping for a premium OLED TV.
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