Recs.
Updated
The Sony X900E is an excellent TV for movies, gaming, and sports. Its performance across different use cases are fairly consistent.
SpecsUpdate
Pros
Pro Excellent picture quality
The X900E looks true-to-life with really deep blacks, clear details, and captivating colors.
Pictures look realistic with lots of details. There’s a great depth to them and you’ll be able to see everything in the picture stand out.
Dark scenes are excellent with nice shadow details - they’re not overly dark to the point where some details get drowned out. This is thanks to really deep black levels, enabled by the panel’s contrast ratio of about 5500:1 - it can produce blacks that are 5500 times darker than the brightest white. This can be pushed even further to over 6500 with local dimming.
The colors are lifelike and accurate even without any calibration by the user. They will look really vibrant even in bright scenes because of the panel’s high peak brightness levels of ~500 nits for SDR & ~550 nits for HDR.
Even in a decently-lit environment, the X900E’s picture quality can still hold up - the panel is great at handling reflections and it can get bright enough to fight off glare.
Pro Great versatility
The X900E is a decent choice for gaming and sports thanks to its relatively low input lag, great handling of motion, and great screen uniformity.
The input lag of ~35ms is sufficient for most gamers, apart from competitive ones, to feel in sync with what's on the display. The panel only requires ~11ms to fully change the pixels color, resulting in fast-moving objects not leaving any trails on the screen, eliminating virtually all motion blur.
It’s also viable for watching sports. Along with the great handling of motion that makes fast-moving objects like football look smooth, the panel has no issues with displaying large, same-color objects on screen, like football fields.
Pro Great at handling glare
Even in a decently lit room, the X900E's picture quality will remain more or less the same as in a dark room.
The colors will still look vibrant because the panel is bright enough to fight off glare. It has peak brightness levels of ~500 nits for SDR & ~550 nits for HDR, and reflections are also significantly reduced by the panel's semi-gloss finish.
Pro Excellent at handling highly dynamic content
The X900E can display fast-paced or rapidly-moving objects very well without any trails behind it. The panel only requires ~11ms to fully change the pixels color, which eliminates virtually all motion blur. It also has a native refresh rate of 120Hz that makes images look smoother.
Pro Excellent for HDR content
On top of the excellent picture quality, the X900E has everything essential to an immersive HDR experience: decent local dimming, great coverage of HDR colors, and high HDR peak brightness level.
Its excellent black levels are further improved with local dimming, which can make parts of the screen darker when the image calls for it. This results in an increase in overall picture quality - the black levels become much deeper, so highlights will stand out further.
The panel can reproduce the wide range of colors required for true HDR playback because of its wide color gamut, which covers ~65% of the standard colors required for HDR according to the Rec. 2020 color space. This is considered great for reproducing HDR details, and it can display these colors accurately at different brightness levels.
Along with the the high peak brightness level of ~550 nits, HDR scenes will look stunning and you'll be able to see HDR details really pop.
Cons
Con Not suitable for group watching
The X900E has a narrow viewing angle that makes it unsuitable for group watching.
Its picture quality gets worse when viewed from off-center angles. At ≥20° away from the center, the blacks start degrading into greys and colors will start looking dull. Brightness levels start decreasing at ≥50° away from the center.
Recommendations
Comments
Flagged Pros + Cons
Pro Great black levels and uniformity
The black levels of a TV affects the viewer’s perception of other colors next to it. If the black levels are not deep enough and doesn’t remain uniform across the screen, the overall picture quality will look “flat” without much depth. The X900E handles this well with only <1.2% deviation (across the entire screen) from what a pure black screen should be — this results in a significant gain in its native contrast levels, thereby increasing the picture quality.
Pro Dark scenes looks great
The X900E can handle the playback of dark scenes very well. With local dimming enabled, the contrast increases from native ratio of 5411:1 to 6534:1 and its black levels and uniformity are also improved because of this. The colors also stand out more because of the high brightness levels, peaking at ~500 nits for SDR & ~600 nits for HDR. This is especially the case for HDR, where a certain level of brightness is required to illuminate the full range of colors.
Pro Excellent picture quality in dark environments
The X900E is excellent for enjoying media in a cinema-like setting. In dark environments, the panel won't have to fight with any light pollution, and so it won't get in the way of the brightness levels. The colors will also stand out more because of this, and with local dimming enabled, it will stand out further as the black levels will improve when the contrast ratio is increased to 6534:1.
Pro Great color reproduction
The X900E can reproduce a wide range of colors accurately even without calibration. All inaccuracies is indiscernible to end users and even enthusiasts, because the color differences has a value below 3.0 — the white balance is at 2.15, color at 2.37, and the gamma is only -0.03 off from what it should be at 2.20.