Sony’s flagship RGB LED TV is incredible

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Sony’s flagship incredible


The Sony Braing RGB LED TV. I watched Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves on the new Brabut had never seen the movie. The landscapes of Faerûn looked natural and real, while the magic cast by the Red Wizards of Thay was vibrant and colorful. Specular highlights in HDR really pop. I saw it with Xenk’s glowing sword as he fought in the Underdark in Honor Among Thieves, but also in the explosions as Furiosa flees across the desert in Mad Max: Fury Road and the sun reflecting off the waves in The Meg.

The Bra I reviewed in May was already an impressive RGB LED TV. The Brand it gets brighter than the 7 II, but the 65-inch 9 II is also $1,000 more expensive, and the price difference increases as screen size goes up. So, is Sony’s flagship Bra

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The Sony Brather side.The Sony Brather side.

$3600

The Good

  • Excellent color accuracy
  • Plenty of brightness for any room
  • Incredible light-diffusing matte screen
  • Same cool lenticular stand as Bra

The Bad

  • More expensive than flagship OLEDs
  • It’s LED, so there’s still some blooming, especially off axis

Sony showed off an early prototype of its RGB LED backlight technology at its Tokyo headquarters back in early 2025, and even at that stage, it was impressive. Every time there’s a new display technology, Sony’s flagship TVs tend to be the best, thanks in part to the company’s industry-leading processing and upscaling. The Bra is the latest in a string of top-tier Sony QD-OLED TVs, and the original Bra mini-LED when it launched in 2024. So with RGB LED TVs the big TV story of 2026, expectations are high for the Bra

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A closeup of the connections panel on the back of the Sony Brac

Only two of the HDMI ports are 2.1, but at least there’s an ATSC 3.0 tuner.

Like the BraBracklight that LED TVs have been using for years, it has clusters of individual red, green, and blue LEDs that blend their light to create a wider range of colors than those blue LED TVs were capable of.

The Brasame awesome lenticular stand — the coolest TV stands I’ve seen in a long time — and both have HDMI 2.1 on just two of their four ports. Maybe next year Sony will catch up with the rest of the high end and finally offer four HDMI 2.1 ports.

The Bra and color performance (although it has the same issue in SDR mode with reds being oversaturated and not as bright as they should be). In Professional mode, the TV’s gamma and EOTF tracking is even better than the 7 II, so shadows are suitably detailed and images have proper depth. Colors like sky blue, foliage, and especially skin tones all look wonderful. And while grayscale measures (and looks) a little blue, I wasn’t bothered by it in anything I watched.

Its great color accuracy, high light output, and anti-reflective screen make it the best bright-room TV available

The Brabright: I measured highlights in HDR at 3,800 nits, and a full-field white screen at 885. The Bra nearly the same full-field brightness at 848 nits. So for everything but the brightest of specular highlights, the two Sony RGB LED TVs have similar real-world brightness. There are TVs that get brighter — such as the TCL X11L — but with the vast majority of content out there, the 9 II is plenty bright with both HDR and SDR (if you turn it up from its default in Professional mode, which is set for dark-room viewing, or change to the slightly less accurate Cinema mode).

The picture processing algorithms also control how well it uses its brightness and color and help to set Sony’s light beaming through the windows, I watched a handful of World Cup games from an ATSC 3.0 antenna, and the Bra

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The Sony Brather side.

The anti-reflective screen is amazing at scattering ambient light without affecting black level.

In addition to the picture performance, a few features distinguish the Bra

The most noticeable upgrade is the anti-reflection screen, which is the best I’ve ever seen. Bright lamps or windows are reduced to a dim glow that’s incredibly difficult to see when anything is playing on the TV. Even when the TV is off, light reflections on the screen don’t draw my attention. The effect degrades the more off angle you get, but it wasn’t distracting until close to 70 degrees off axis, which is a pretty severe angle to watch TV at, even with a big group of friends over.

HDR formats: Dolby Vision, HDR10, HLG

HDMI inputs: 2 x HDMI 2.1 (one with eARC); 2 x HDMI 2.0

Audio support: Dolby Atmos, DTS: X

Gaming features:4K/120Hz, ALLM, VRR

Sizes available (inches): 65, 75, 85, 115

It also has more dimming zones than the 7 II. More dimming zones allow for a finer control of backlight transition from light to dark parts of the screen, and usually lead to less blooming (where bright light bleeds into a dark section next to it). That is mostly true on the Brales blooming very well. There’s a slight glow around subtitles or a very dim haze around fireworks. The blooming was a bit more prominent at the far ends of my 8-foot couch, but it’s better than the BraTCL X11L mini-LED TV). It’s still an LED TV, and there will always be some degree of blooming.

When I stood more off angle next to my couch, though, the blooming got worse — and not just around subtitles. I noticed both white and color bleeding into neighboring colors. Apple TV has a Peanuts screen saver, which is mostly Snoopy doing things on or around his doghouse. From an off angle, I could see the white from his body extend into the yellow background. I wouldn’t suggest the Braet a different viewing experience than those toward the middle. This isn’t something I remember seeing on the Bra wonder if it’s related to the anti-reflective coating on the screen.

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The Braenticular stand as the Bra

<div style="background-<div class="duet–article–image-gallery-The Sony Brather side.

The TV uses Google TV as its OS, and it was quick and easy to use during my time with it.