With Samsung’s Object Tracking Sound system in the mix, audio for the S95C extends beyond the confines of its frame. Sound quality for the S95C is also a notable improvement on the S95B. The end result, as we summarised in our review, is the kind of balanced, dynamic picture performance “we’ve never seen before on an OLED TV”. This means that the S95C is a more suitable TV for bright rooms, and it manages to achieve this while still offering the dynamic, rich picture quality typical of OLED panels. In our review, we measured the S95C’s peak brightness as high as almost 1,400 nits, which for comparison is much greater than the LG C2’s peak of around 850 nits. Samsung improves on its attempts to marry the strengths of OLED and QLED panel technologies (which it calls QD-OLED) with the S95C, which offers a panel that is almost 40% brighter than the 2022 model without any sacrifices to picture quality. While its predecessor (the S95B) was powerful in its own right, this year’s update feels like a true step above. Competition will be fierce as we get a look at more of 2023’s TV releases, but right now the exceptional Samsung S95C OLED holds bragging rights as the most impressive TV on the market.
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