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Vizio M-Series Quantum TVs (2019) vs Samsung Q80 (2019)
The Vizio M-Series Quantum 43" has impressed reviewers from two sources that are among the most highly trusted on the internet, namely Tom's Guide and CNET. It did great in their objective hands-on roundups - it earned the "The best Vizio TV brings P-Series performance to the M-Series range" and "Second-best TV for the money" awards from Tom's Guide and CNET, respectively. That's high praise from such reputable sources.
Moving on to the Samsung Q80 75": it was unable to reach the very top of any roundups from sources that conduct reliable and unbiased testing. Nonetheless, it still managed to impress reviewers from a number of such sites, like TrustedReviews, soundandvision.com, Rtings, AVForums, What Hi-Fi?, Expert Reviews, PCGamesN, and inews.co.uk, enough for them to include them on those lists.
We analyzed all of the review data that we could find on these two TVs. First, we examined sources that tested and scored both of these products - Rtings favored the Samsung Q80 75" over the Vizio M-Series Quantum 43", whereas reviewers at soundandvision.com haven't shown a preference for either.
Then we took a look at which sources liked them the most - we found that the Vizio M-Series Quantum 43" was best received by soundandvision.com - it gave it a score of 9, whereas the Samsung Q80 75" got its highest score of 10 from reviewers at TrustedReviews.
Lastly, we averaged out all of the reviews scores that we could find on these two products and compared them to other TVs on the market. We learned that both of them performed far better than most of their competitors - the overall review average earned by TVs being 7.7 out of 10, whereas the Vizio M-Series Quantum 43" and Samsung Q80 75" managed averages of 7.9 and 8.7 points, respectively.
Due to the difference in their prices, however, it's important to keep in mind that a direct Vizio M-Series Quantum 43" vs. Samsung Q80 75" comparison might not be entirely fair - some sources don't take value for money into account when assigning their scores and therefore have a tendency to rate more premium products better.
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